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Growing Up, Spiritually

Kenneth E. Hagin

Contents

FOREWORD

PART I

1 LOCATING YOURSELF

2 BABYHOOD

Innocence

Ignorance

Irritability

3 CHILDHOOD

Unsteadiness

Curiosity

Talkativeness

4 MANHOOD

Esteeming Earthly Things Lightly

Deadness to Censure or Praise

Ability to Recognize God at Work

PART II
5 WALKING WITH YOUR FATHER

Getting Acquainted Through the Word

Experiencing Acquaintance

6 WALKING IN LOVE

"Loves" Compared: Divine—Natural Human An Expose' on Love

PART III

7 RECEIVING THE KNOWLEDGE

The Wrong Diet

The Place of Right Teaching

The Fault of Inadequate Teaching

PART IV

8 WHAT MANNER OF MAN ARE YOU?

9 THE NATURAL MAN

Knowledge Contrasted: Revelation—Natural Human The Natural Walk

10 THE CARNAL MAN

Walks as a "Mere Man"

Growing Out of Carnality

11 THE SPIRITUAL MAN

Knowing the Father

Knowing the Son


Knowing the Holy Ghost

PART V

12 THE RIGHT DIET

Fruit of the Human Spirit

Renewing the Mind

13 A WORD OF ENCOURAGEMENT

FOREWORD

Growing up is a process.

In this book we'll talk about growing up—spiritually. Our lessons, which may
even seem unrelated, will be those that will help you to grow.

First, they will help you sum up your own case to discern where you are
spiritually. Then, after you've located yourself, they will help you grow out of
that stage into another stage— spiritually.

PART I

Chapter 1

LOCATING YOURSELF

"... When he (Christ) ascended up on high, he led captivity captive, and gave
gifts unto men...And he gave some, apostles; and some, prophets; and some,
evangelists; and some, pastors and teachers; For the perfecting of the saints,
for the work of the ministry, for the edifying of the body of Christ: Till we all
come in the unity of the faith, and of the knowledge of the Son of God, unto a
perfect man, unto the measure of the stature of the fulness of Christ: That we
henceforth be no more children, tossed to and fro, and carried about with
every wind of doctrine, by the sleight of men, and cunning craftiness,
whereby they lie in wait to deceive; But speaking the truth in love, may grow
up into him in all things, which is the head, even Christ:"
—Ephesians 4:8, 11-15

Evidently Paul didn't consider the church at Ephesus to be grown up yet. Did
you notice he said, "But speaking the truth in love, may grow up...."?

And, "Till we all come in the unity of the faith, and of the knowledge of the
Son of God, unto a perfect man...."

This is the King James translation. I think when it says "perfect" our minds
tend to run off on a little tangent and we miss what he's saying to us. Moffat's
translation reads, "until we reach maturity." The Amplified translation says,
"that we might arrive at really mature manhood." Paul is talking about
growing up to be a man, or a mature person, spiritually. "That we henceforth
be no more children." He's talking about growing up spiritually, about
reaching spiritual maturity, about becoming a full grown man spiritually.

God wants us to grow.

And the Bible teaches that there is a striking similarity between spiritual
development and physical development. It speaks of at least three stages in
spiritual development which correspond to three stages in physical
development. They are: babyhood, childhood, and manhood.

As we look at them in just that order and notice subdivisions under each one,
you'll find that some of the characteristics true of each stage of natural
development are also true of the corresponding spiritual stage.

And I believe somewhere we can locate ourselves.

Chapter 2

BABYHOOD

"As newborn babes, desire the sincere milk of the word, that ye may grow
thereby:"

—I Peter 2:2
Here in Peter the Bible speaks about Christians being "newborn babes." No
one is born a full grown human naturally and physically. They are born
babies, and then they grow up. Similarly no one is born a full grown
Christian. You are born a spiritual babe, and then you grow up.

There's a whole sermon in just that fact. We are going to be held accountable
for the spiritual babies born into the family of God around our altars and in
our churches.

I pastured nearly twelve years and really you don't expect too much out of
babies because they can't do too much for themselves. Someone else though
can do something for them.

Too many times someone is saved on Sunday night and if they make a
mistake before Wednesday night everyone in the church knows it, and is
already fussing about it. They expect him to be living, by Wednesday night or
the next Sunday, just as good a Christian life as they do when it took them
years to get where they are.

A number of years ago I held a two-week meeting for a particular minister.


We were scheduled to go longer but I cut it off.

Crowds were coming. The auditorium would seat 800 and it was comfortably
full every night. People were responding. We weren't really having
evangelistic services—I was doing a lot of teaching and praying for the sick
—yet on Saturday night when I gave the invitation first for people to be
saved, thirty-three adults came for salvation.

They stood across the front as I prayed with them and led them in a prayer.
Then I sent them back to the prayer room where others would pray with them
while I went on ministering to the sick.

The thing that so impressed me about this service was that of the thirty-three
who came for salvation so many were young married couples who looked to
be between the ages of twenty-five to thirty-two. I learned later not one or the
group had ever been a Christian; not one was a member of any church. I
asked the pastor after the service about these young people.
He said, "None of the thirty-three were backsliders.

They were all sinners who came to be saved."

That was unusual. I asked him if he knew any of them.

He said, "I don't know a one of them. They've never been to my church
before."

I asked him, "Did you get their names and addresses?"

He said, "Oh brother, I just figure if they got anything they'll be back. You
don't have to worry about them."

I said, "I'm closing the meeting tomorrow night."

People are born babies. They need to be seen about. They had never been to
that church before.

They had never heard any Full Gospel preaching before. They needed to be
followed up and prayed with, talked to, and dealt with. They were newborn
babies.

After a leading healing evangelist held a meeting in a certain city a pastor


who had cooperated with it said to me, "I'm never going to cooperate with
another one of those city-wide meetings. Never another one."

"Why?" I asked.

"I didn't get a person out of it," he said. "Not a one.

Not a member. It didn't do me a bit of good in the world."

"It didn't?"

"No."

I asked him, "Did you get cards on any of the folks who came to the altar?"
"Oh yes," he said, "they gave me some cards. But none of them ever showed
up."

I was talking to another pastor in the same town about the same meeting and
he said, "We got twenty-nine new members out of that meeting. I wish he
would come back."

"How did you get them?" I asked. "How did they happen to come to your
church?"

He said, "Oh they didn't know anything about our church. I got the cards on
some of them and visited them. I didn't just encourage them to come to our
church, but I insisted they get in some good Full Gospel church and go on
with God. And some of them came to ours."

We are responsible for babies. Babies don't know.

Babies can't do for themselves. A newborn baby in the natural can't do much.
He doesn't walk yet. He doesn't dress himself. In fact, he doesn't do anything
for himself. About all he does is eat. And about all he eats is milk. Spiritually
there are newborn babes. And if they get the sincere milk of the Word, they
will grow thereby.

Innocence

The first thing that attracts you to a baby is its innocence. People say, "You
sweet little innocent thing." No one thinks of a baby as having a past. It
doesn't have one.

Do you know something? If you are a newborn babe in Christ, you don't have
any past. You may have been as mean as the devil. You may have been the
worst wretch that ever walked. But no matter how you may have lived, when
you were born-again you became a new man in Christ Jesus and you don't
have any past. God looks at you as an innocent babe.

II CORINTHIANS 5:17 17

Therefore if any man be in Christ, he is a new creature (creation): old things


are passed away; behold, all things are become new.

Even though innocence belongs to the babyhood stage of Christianity, it is


one characteristic we should never outgrow. We should maintain this state of
innocence for the simple reason that if we don't, we will fall under the
condemnation of the devil and be defeated in spiritual life.

A new convert is simple, full of faith, ready and willing to learn. We should
always maintain that teachable spirit. Yet sometimes when we grow older we
sort of come to the place where we have a "know-it-all" attitude; a "You-
can't-tell-me-anything" attitude.

Those people no one can help, including God Himself.

A group of men gathered in back of the auditorium after service one night in
one of the churches I pastored. As I walked up to shake hands with them one
of the deacons said, "Brother Hagin, what do you think about..." and he
mentioned a certain Bible subject. I found out later he did that purposely to
bring me into their discussion.

"Well, I don't know just where your discussion is,"

I said, "and whether I could fit in or not."

The man the deacon really wanted to help spoke up immediately, "Well, I'll
tell you. You or anyone else can't tell me a thing in the world about that Bible
subject. I know all there is to be known on it. I know all about it."

I said, "If you do, you've got me beat. And if you do, you have every other
preacher beat that I've ever seen or known of, or any other person."

He said, "Well, I know all about it. No one can tell me a thing about it."

But to tell the truth, that fellow was the biggest baby in the entire church. He
didn't know all about it at all.

Keep an open spirit and a teachable spirit, as well as an innocent spirit,


toward God and man.
Ignorance

Our two children are grown now with families of their own. In observing our
babies and grand-babies I know this—a baby seems to think everything he
can get his hands on is intended for his mouth.

A newborn puts his hands in his mouth. As he grows a little older and learns
to crawl across the floor if he finds a screw it goes in his mouth, if he finds a
spoon it goes in his mouth, if he finds a spider it goes in his mouth.

Babies are ignorant concerning these things. They don't know what should go
in their mouths and what shouldn't. And babies have died as a result of not
knowing that. They have gotten hold of something poisonous and it killed
them.

In one case I know of, a 14 month old baby, crawling across the floor, picked
up some spoiled food left there perhaps by an older child. Before they could
get the baby to a doctor, it died. An autopsy revealed the poisonous food. The
parents went back home and found some of the food on the floor of a room
which was seldom used. That little one didn't know he shouldn't eat it. He
was ignorant concerning the effect it would have.

What am I getting to? The same thing is true spiritually speaking. We need to
be careful what goes into our spiritual mouths. We need to be as careful about
what we read as we are about what we eat physically. Christians many times
think nothing at all of gulping down some poisonous doctrine which will
poison life spiritually, rob them of their spirituality, and ruin their testimony
if they accept it.

A number of years ago a denominational minister was filled with the Holy
Spirit and had a marvelous experience with God. I'll guarantee you this much,
I know of no greater soul winner in any church than that man. He was
outstanding. He would get people saved when no one else could. It seemed to
me you could stand up the twelve best preachers in America and let all of
them preach and give an altar call—then he could take the same crowd,
preach to them, and get more souls saved than any of the others after they'd
had first shot at it. That was his ministry; an evangelistic type ministry. But
he got to reading after some false stuff, finally accepted some false doctrine,
and got off on it. If he has won a soul in more than twenty years I don't know
it and no one else does either.

I know of some born-again, Spirit-filled people who were soul winners,


getting people saved and filled with the Holy Spirit. But they got taken up
with certain doctrines. Some of them told me, "God is doing a different thing
nowadays." No. God's not doing a different thing nowadays. They're just off
their rockers. He's still concerned about saving people. They just left the
fundamental truths of the doctrine of the Word of God and went off on
something that doesn't amount to a hill of beans.

Some things are actually poisonous in themselves.

And some things it doesn't make a whole lot of difference how you believe
on them—they are simply not essential to salvation and it wouldn't make any
difference whether you believed it, or you didn't believe it.

But too many times Christian people will feed on everything in the world
except the right thing, and will become poisoned. Then they lead disciples off
after themselves. If the Spirit of God is in it, He is concerned about there
being unity. Did you notice Ephesians 4:13 says, "Till we all come in the
unity of the faith"? That which will divide Christians is not of the Spirit of
God—it's of the devil. The Spirit of Love never divides.

I went into a Christian home once and saw some books I knew to be
poisonous lying on a living room table. They were religious books, but they
were poisonous. (We need not only be careful about secular books, but we
need to be careful about reading religious books.) I purposely worked the
conversation around to these books. I picked one up and said something
about it.

This person was a born-again, Spirit-filled Christian but they said "Oh that is
the most marvelous book."

"Is it?" I said.

"Yes."
In the early days of my Christian experience I had happened to get hold of
some of these books and had detected immediately the poison in them. So I
just turned to certain pages and began to read certain things aloud.

"Well now, Brother Hagin, they give chapter and verse in there. I looked
some of them up and those verses are in the Bible."

I said, "Certainly. If they didn't give some verses—though they may take
them out of their setting—and a little Bible, folks wouldn't read it. If you
were going to poison a dog he wouldn't eat just the poison. You have to put
the poison on a good piece of meat."

Do you see what I'm talking about? You have to put the poison on a good
piece of meat to get a dog to come. The devil will use some good scripture to
get you to eat it, but he'll put a little poison on it. Be careful no matter who
you read after. Don't read everything you can get your hands on. Unless you
are a fully mature Christian and able to rightly divide it, it would be best not
to read such things.

Years ago I held a meeting for a Full Gospel minister, a very well educated
man, a doctor of divinity. Up to that time I had never seen a larger personal
library than his. There's no telling how many hundreds of volumes lined the
walls from ceiling to floor. Being a bookworm myself I was interested in
looking it over. I read some of his books while I was there in three weeks of
meetings.

As we talked one day he said, "Brother Hagin, I'll be perfectly honest with
you. There are some things I've read that I wish I'd never read. They bother
me.

They hinder me yet, though I don't read them anymore..." And he mentioned
some of these books.

They were religious books. But he said, "I just wish I had never read them. It
hinders my faith today. It hinders me in believing God today."

It would have been better for him never to have built that into his inner
consciousness. But he had.
When I start reading something that takes faith out of me instead of putting
faith in me, I have enough sense to lay it down right then. Be careful what
you feed upon. There is a saying used in the area of man's natural diet, "You
are what you eat." The same thing is true spiritually, "You are what you
read."

Irritability

Babies are easily spoiled. And when they become spoiled they become
irritable. It's mighty easy to spoil them to a light so that you have to keep a
light on. It's mighty easy to spoil them to being handled and held.

They are babies.

But the Bible says something about babies growing up. David said, "Surely I
have behaved and quieted myself, as a child that is weaned of his mother: my
soul is even as a weaned child" (Psalm 131:2). The Bible says concerning
Isaac, "And the child grew, and was weaned: and Abraham made a great feast
the same day that Isaac was weaned" (Genesis 21:8).

That ought to be a great day—that day when Christians grow enough to get
off the bottle. But you know, it isn't. It ought to be a feast day; instead it's a
cry day. I know, I pastored nearly twelve years. It's no wonder to me at all
that we're not doing more in some of our churches than we are. If we do get a
newborn babe in we don't have a bottle for it. Every bottle is in use. And the
older babies are not going to give up their bottles. Every bed in the spiritual
nursery is taken. And the older babies don't want to get up and give up their
beds.

In the last church I pastored there were two ladies who lived next door to
each other. Bless their hearts.

They had been saved I don't know how long, baptized with the Holy Spirit
and speaking with tongues. But that doesn't make you a full grown Christian.
They were the biggest babies in the world. You'd have to run after them, and
run after them, and run after them.

They wanted you to come and pet them. They would miss church Sunday for
you to come over on Monday and pet them.

So I just quit.

When one of the deacons said something to me about it I said, "Brother, if


you want to go over and visit them, you go. But I'm never going over there
again. The longest day I live, or the longest day I pastor this church, I will
never set foot inside their houses again. I'm tired of wasting my time with
them.

They are babies who want to stay babies. There are other people who can be
helped. There are new people to be visited. And others are getting saved who
can be taught."

You couldn't have taught those old babies anything. So I quit visiting them
and never set foot inside their houses the eighteen months I continued to
pastor that church. But do you know what? When they saw I wasn't coming
again I believe they were more faithful to church than they'd ever been.

We ought to grow enough spiritually so that instead of someone's having to


come and visit us, and pump us up, and prop us up, and pray with us, and
feed us, we are able to be out helping others ourselves. When weaning time
comes we ought to thank God for it.

Actually, if a child is weaned properly, when weaning time comes it will turn
its face from the bottle. If it isn't, you have a cry on your hands. If you can
just keep people on the milk, they will grow. Peter said, "Desire the sincere
milk of the word, that ye may grow thereby."

I have actually had pastors say to me, in trying to tell me I was giving their
congregation a little too much, "Now Brother Hagin, I know my congregation
should be better than they are, but you have to be careful. All they can take is
a little milk. All I ever feed them is a little milk."

I said, "No, you haven't even given them milk.

You've been pastor here thirty years. If they had been getting milk they
would have grown. Peter said that we would grow thereby."
They didn't grow; so they weren't even getting milk. They were just getting
bluejohn. Bluejohn is milk with all the cream taken out.

Babies are easily frustrated, easily distracted, easily hurt. The Lord wants to
bring us to the place where we're not so easily frustrated. He wants to bring
us to the place where we're not so easily distracted. He wants to bring us to
the place where we're not so easily hurt.

Chapter 3

CHILDHOOD

"That we henceforth be no more children...."

—Ephesians 4:14

Paul is talking about spiritual children here. He wrote this letter to the church
at Ephesus and we know they had at least twelve men in that church. Acts
19:7

tells us about twelve men and I'm sure they had more.

When Paul said "that we henceforth be no more children" he was talking


about that they would be no longer spiritual children but would grow up
spiritually.

Characteristics of the childhood stage of spiritual development are similar to


the physical.

Unsteadiness

When my son was a boy of thirteen or fourteen, I told him to mow the yard.
The way he grabbed that lawn mower and lit out you'd have thought he
would have had it mowed in thirty minutes. Back then we had a push mower,
the yard wasn't too big, and he could have had it mowed in forty-five if he'd
kept at it. I had to go to town to attend to some business. When I came back
after about an hour and a half, there sat the mower in the middle of the yard.
He'd made about two strips after I'd left. I began to look for him. I asked my
wife where he was.

"I don't know," she said. "Didn't he go with you?"

"No," I said. And I looked to see if I could find some boys playing ball on the
corner. I knew if they were, that's where he would be. They were. And he
was.

He was unsteady. You couldn't depend on him. As has been said many times,
you can't put a grown head on a child. You can't. The same thing is true
spiritually.

A mother tells her young daughter, "I want you to do the dishes and sweep
the kitchen. I'm going next door for a little bit." The daughter starts out all
right, but when the mother returns the dishes are unwashed or half done and
she can't find Mary anywhere. She goes outside and begins to call her. After a
while she goes to the neighbors on the other side and Mary is there playing
dolls with Susie.

Children in the natural are unsteady...unreliable...impressionable...spasmodic.


Spiritual children are the same way.

When a new pastor comes to a church everyone comes. I've gone to pastor a
church and people would gather around, pat me on the back, shake my hand,
and say, "Brother Hagin, I want you to know I'm with you.

I'm with you one hundred percent. I'm behind you."

Six months went by and I didn't see them. Nine months went by and I didn't
see them. I thought, "Well now they're behind me; they said they were." The
trouble was they were so far behind me I never could reach them. They were
too far behind to do any good.

Then as an evangelist I went from church to church holding meetings for


several years. The first service or two some people would get right in and
shake my hand and hug my neck and tell me, "Bless God, I'm with you. I
believe this is it. We're going to have a meeting." Then we'd run two or three
weeks without seeing them again. The last Sunday night when the pastor
would announce we were closing I've had them run up to me, look at the
pastor like he didn't know what was going on and say, "He's not going to
close this meeting, is he?" As far as they were concerned it had been closed
all the time.

Curiosity

Children are full of curiosity. Just as sure as you'd come in with a sack and
set it down on the kitchen table, our second granddaughter, about eight at the
time, would be in that sack. She was full of curiosity.

She wanted to know what was in there.

Some of these spiritual children that have never really grown up spiritually—
though they've had time and opportunity—as sure as they can catch a little bit
of gossip going want to know, "Who? Who?" They're full of curiosity.

Curiosity is the characteristic of a child. If you tell a child not to look in a


closet, he is going to get in it as sure as the world. Curious. Spiritual children
are the same way. They're always poking their noses in the other fellow's
business. The Word of God teaches us to tend to our own business. God
doesn't want you poking your nose into the other fellow's business.

Learn to be quiet and tend to your own business.

I was pastoring a church when one fellow wanted to know what all I was
doing with my money. I said, "What are you doing with yours?"

He said, "That isn't any of your business."

I said, "I don't consider it any of your business what I'm doing with mine."

He got the point. You know, it is no more the church member's business what
the pastor is doing with his money than it is the pastor's business what the
church member is doing with his.

Curiosity is a characteristic of a child.

Talkativeness
Children have never learned the value of silence.

They are talkative. And you will find folks in the childhood stage of spiritual
growth are nearly always talking.

Did you know the Word of God has something to say along this line? It tells
us, "In the multitude of words there wanteth not sin...." (Proverbs 10:19).
And, "...a fool's voice is known by multitude of words" (Ecclesiastes 5:3).

We need to learn to be quiet. A child doesn't know any better so he's always
blabbing.

I remember one time when my boy was three years old. We had gotten into
bed late one Sunday night after church. I had preached twice and was tired.
We all slept in one large room. He was in a bed across the room from us. The
baby was in the crib. The lights out and it was dark.

"Daddy," he said.

I hadn't gone to sleep but I thought if I pretended to be asleep he would hush


and go to sleep.

"Daddy."

I didn't say anything.

"Daddy."

I didn't say anything.

"Daddy."

I didn't say anything, and he just kept getting a little louder.

"Daddy."

Finally my wife nudged me and said quietly, "Why don't you answer that
child?"
I whispered back, "Knowing him he'll get started talking." He was three years
old and didn't know anything about the value of silence. He'd get started
talking and you couldn't get him to shut up. I thought if I didn't answer him
he would think I was asleep and shut up. But he just kept getting louder.

"Daddy. Daddy. Daddy."

Finally I said, "What is it, son?"

"What's tomorrow?"

I said, "Oh, be quiet and go to sleep. It's time to go to sleep."

"Well, what's tomorrow?"

"It's Monday. Now go to sleep."

"What's the next day?"

"It's Tuesday."

"Is tomorrow always Monday?"

"No, tomorrow is not always Monday. When tomorrow gets here then
tomorrow will be Tuesday"

"I thought you said it was Monday."

"Well, it was Monday, but when Monday gets here then tomorrow will be
Tuesday."

"If tomorrow is Monday, how can it be Tuesday?"

"Well, that's just the way it is."

"What's the next day?"

"It's Wednesday."
"Will it ever be tomorrow?"

"Yes. Now hush and get to sleep."

"What's the next day?"

"Thursday."

"What's the next day?"

"Friday."

"What's the next day?"

"Saturday."

"What's the next day?"

"Sunday. That's today."

"Is Sunday always today?"

"No, it's just today today. When Monday gets here, it will be today."

"I thought you said it was tomorrow."

"Oh, now you have me confused. I want you to be quiet, and if you don't be
quiet I'm going to get up and give you a whipping."

Like natural children, spiritual children have never learned the value of
silence. We need to be careful about what we say.

There was a fellow called Father Nash who used to go along ahead of Charles
Finney and get a few folks together to pray for the revival. Someone once
asked Finney, "Do you know a little preacher by the name of Father Nash?"

Finney said, "Yes sir. He goes along ahead of time and prays for the revival. I
don't have him hired. He just took it upon himself to do it."
"What kind of a fellow is he?" this person asked.

"Well," Finney said, "he's just like any other fellow who prays—he is a
fellow of few words."

Folks who are talking all the time are usually guilty of at least three sins.
They are often guilty of evil speaking—talking about and discussing the
faults and failures of people not present. They are often guilty of vain
speaking— always talking about themselves: what I've done; what I'm going
to do; where I've been. And they are often guilty of foolish speaking—jesting,
joking, and things that are unprofitable.

1. Evil speaking—talking about and discussing the faults and failures of


people not present.

(We'll soon get through with this negative side of growing up and get on to
the positive side. But this side needs to be dealt with, too.)

I was holding a meeting in Oklahoma when my son was about twelve. He had
a four-day weekend holiday so I drove down to Texas and brought him back
to spend a few days with me. I was gone all the time and didn't get to be with
him much. We stayed in the parsonage with the pastor and his wife.

One day at the table, the pastor got to talking about some of the church
members, airing some of their faults and failures. I noticed my boy just kept
looking at him.

Finally I said to him, right at his own table, "Brother, I wish you wouldn't talk
that way in front of my boy."

He looked at me rather startled.

I said, "I would rather you'd curse in front of him.

That wouldn't register on him. He wouldn't pay any attention to that. But for
the twelve years I pastored, he always thought every member we ever had
was an angel."

They weren't—any more than all his members were. But Ken thought all of
them were sprouting wings—he didn't know that was just their shoulder
blades sticking out. He never heard his parents say one word about any
deacon, Sunday School teacher, superintendent, or church member.

You need to be careful what you say around children, and other people as
well.

I remember one dear soul. Bless her heart. Every time we took prayer
requests she would say, "Pray for So-and-so," and she'd call her husband's
name. He came with her every once in a while and even if he was there she'd
never stop to think about it; but would get up and call his name."

He rather liked me and I'd go visit him. We'd talk about the Bible. To tell you
the real truth about it, he knew more about the Bible than she did. And in
talking to him, I learned some things. I learned where she was missing it. I
tried to talk to her about it, but it didn't help.

So one Wednesday night when there wasn't anyone there but us; when she
said, "Pray for So-and-so," I said, "Sister, we're not going to do it."

I answered her right back from the pulpit and said, "We're not going to do it.
Don't turn in another prayer request for him. We've prayed and prayed, but
you undo all our prayers. You run home from church every single time some
woman in the church looks a little hatefully at you—you think—and you tell
your husband what an awful person she is. And if the preacher doesn't just
preach to suit you, you run home and tell him what an awful person the
preacher is. I know. I've talked to him. He couldn't have known it unless you
told him. He knows more about what's going on down at this church than
anyone in the church. You run home and tell him everything that is—and a
lot of things that ain't. You rehash everybody's faults, failures, and
shortcomings. And as long as you're going to do that, you're going to
undermine the effects of our prayers."

I learned to appreciate that dear soul. She had enough sense to listen and she
straightened up. She became a splendid Christian. And he got saved. I dealt
what seemed like severely with her, but she took it.

She wasn't an ignoramus. People who do have a little something upstairs are
able to know when you are telling them the truth. Some folks would never
know and you just have to help them the best you can.

Sometimes I almost get sickened when I go to church. All the singing is


about what I did, what I felt, and what happened. We scarcely worship the
Lord. It's no wonder to me that God doesn't move any more than He does in
our midst. The Bible said in the 13th chapter of Acts concerning this group
down at Antioch, "As they ministered to the Lord, and fasted, the Holy Ghost
said,...." (verse 2). They weren't ministering to one another.

If we can be humble enough and yielded enough God can use us. I just don't
like the idea of leaving the impression we are something big and something
great.

It's all right to talk about how God uses people and rejoice about what God is
doing. But I've been in some meetings where those in charge bragged on each
other from the natural standpoint until it was simply nauseating.

Thank God for His blessings. And let's be careful that we are not taken up
with vain talking.

3. Foolish speaking.

It's all right to be friendly. And it's all right to tell something funny
sometimes—but it is possible to spend too much of your time doing that. The
Bible even says something about jesting and joking that are not convenient. It
doesn't say they are a sin necessarily, but it says they are not convenient.

EPHESIANS 5:4

4 Neither filthiness, nor foolish talking, nor jesting, which are not convenient:
but rather giving of thanks.

I was holding a meeting one time for a fellow, a fine fellow. I think a lot of
him. He's changed considerably. But I never saw a fellow as full of jokes as
he was then. We had two services a day, and every time I saw him he'd tell
me a new joke. I don't see how in the world he could remember them. He'd
tell me at least three a day which were brand new. Morning service, evening
service, and when we'd go out for a bite to eat after church he'd have another
one for me; sometimes several.

I usually quote my scripture as I preach and once when we were out eating he
said, "I wish I could remember scriptures like you do."

I said, "You could if you'd spend as much time on them as you do on jokes.
How do you remember jokes? I can't remember them. I go to tell some of
them and get them all messed up."

The thing about it was I wasn't interested in them.

Now don't go off and say I said it was wrong to tell something funny. I didn't
say that at all. I said it is wrong to put that first and just blab, blab, blab, blab,
and leave God out. I'm talking about things that will hinder our spiritual
growth. We are never going to grow spiritually and just feed and talk on
those kinds of things.

I'm a preacher and I fellowship with preachers more than anyone else. It's a
strange thing, but sometimes in trying to fellowship with preachers you can't
find too many you can really talk to about spiritual things. I've held meetings
in church after church—Full Gospel churches—and preacher after preacher
wants only to talk about fishing and hunting, or about how many cattle they
have down on their ranch, or how many houses they have, or how much
property they have. I think it's all right to go fishing.

It's all right to go hunting. It's all right to have property. I'm glad they do. But
if you'd try to mention the things of God and get in the least bit deep, they'd
look at you like you were a nut.

I'm glad it's not that way with some folks. But it is that way with too many.
And we cannot grow spiritually and spend all our time talking about natural
things.

Chapter 4

MANHOOD
There are many scriptural characteristics of the manhood stage of spirituality.
In fact, this entire book is aimed at seeing this spiritual man. But three of his
characteristics we'll discuss here are:

1. Esteeming Earthly Things Lightly

2. Deadness to Censure or Praise

3. Ability to Recognize God at Work

Esteeming Earthly Things Lightly

"By faith Moses, when he was come to years, refused to be called the son of
Pharaoh's daughter; Choosing rather to suffer affliction with the people of
God, than to enjoy the pleasures of sin for a season; Esteeming the reproach
of Christ greater riches than the treasures in Egypt: for he had respect unto
the recompence of the reward."

—Hebrews 11:24-26

Moses, when he was come to years—that means when he grew up, when he
became a man—refused to be called the son of Pharaoh's daughter.

Think about what he refused. He saw a difference in the people of God and
the people of the world.

(Egypt is a type of the world.) In the world he was the son of Pharaoh's
daughter, in line for the throne. He had honor, wealth, prestige. He had the
things the earth and the world had to offer. Yet he esteemed the reproach of
Christ greater riches than the treasures in Egypt. Heir to the treasures of
Egypt, but he esteemed the reproaches.

One characteristic of growing up is to esteem earthly things lightly. You


cannot put earthly things above spiritual things and grow spiritually.

God wants to prosper His children. He's concerned about us. He wants us to
have the good things of life.

He said in His Word, "If ye be willing and obedient, ye shall eat the good of
the land" (Isaiah 1:19). But He doesn't want us to put those things first.

Some are more interested in making the dollar than in serving God. Spiritual
things must come first if you are to be spiritual. You must esteem spiritual
things more than the dollar, more than earthly things.

No, it's not wrong to have money. It's wrong for money to have you. It's
wrong for money to be your ruler, your master.

God wants you to prosper.

III JOHN 2

2 Beloved, I wish above all things that thou mayest prosper and be in health,
even as thy soul prospereth.

That's talking about financial and material prosperity, physical prosperity,


and spiritual prosperity. Look at it again. "Beloved, I wish above all things
that thou mayest prosper (material prosperity) and be in health (physical
prosperity), even as thy soul (spiritual prosperity) prospereth."

The first Psalm is so beautiful—and makes it so clear that God wants us to


prosper.

PSALM 1:1-3

1 Blessed is the man that walketh not in the counsel of the ungodly, nor
standeth in the way of sinners, nor sitteth in the seat of the scornful.

2 But his delight is in the law of the Lord; and in his law doth he meditate
day and night.

3 And he shall be like a tree planted by the rivers of water, that bringeth forth
his fruit in his season; his leaf also shall not wither; and whatsoever he doeth
shall prosper.

God wants us to prosper.

Our need, however, is to evaluate things as they should be evaluated—to


esteem earthly things lightly—to put first things first.

We all think the preacher ought to be that way. If a pastor takes a better
church where he makes more money, people think, "He just took that so he'd
be better paid." But they wouldn't think a thing in the world of taking a better
job, and perhaps moving off and leaving a good spiritual church and getting
in one where they'd all backslide.

I was talking to a fellow a number of years ago. I was over in his town on
business and ran into him on the street. This was back in depression days. He
had a good job, making good money, but he'd been offered a job making $50
more a month. That doesn't sound like much today, but in those low
depression days it was a lot of money. I knew lots of men with families who
didn't even make $50 a month. He already made a good salary, but was
offered this job in another town, making $50 more than he was making.

He said, "Did you know I was moving to So-and-so?"

He was a member of a Full Gospel church and I happened to know that in the
town where he was moving they didn't have a Full Gospel church.

So I said, "What kind of church do you have in that town?"

He said, "What do you mean?"

I said, "Is there a Full Gospel church there?"

He said, "I don't know; I never thought about that."

I said, "No, you were just interested in the $50

more a month. But wait a minute, I knew you before you came into
Pentecost. I happen to know you'd spent all your money. Doctors thought
your wife had cancer of the stomach. But when she got the baptism of the
Holy Ghost, without anybody praying for her, she got healed and can eat
anything she wants. I happen to know you'd spent thousands of dollars on one
of your boys physically, but since you've come in where divine healing is
taught, that boy has been in good health."
He said, "Yes, that's right."

I said, "I happen to know that there isn't a Full Gospel church in that town."

(It would have been different if he was thinking about going there to start
one, but he wasn't capable.) He said, "You know, I never thought of that."

I said, "No, you'd take your family out of a good church where the Gospel is
preached, where you've been blessed immeasurably, physically as well as
spiritually, for $50 more a month. I'll not tell you to go or not to go, but I will
tell you you'd better pray about it."

The next time I saw him, he said, "I'm not going. I don't believe it's worth it."

A man and his wife came to a meeting I was holding in Dallas. The woman's
mother, who had gone to be with the Lord, was a member of a church I'd
pastored some years before. She was a wonderful Christian and a great
blessing to my wife and me as young people with babies.

I knew that this lady hadn't always been a Christian. She used to visit her
mother and her mother said she wasn't saved. But then she had gotten saved,
received the Holy Spirit, and attended an independent Full Gospel church; a
fine church. And she was going on for God.

So I asked, "Where do you go to church now?"

She said, "Oh, I don't go anywhere."

"What do you mean? I thought you were a member of..." And I mentioned a
certain church.

"Oh, they don't even have a church there anymore.

It was closed down for awhile. Then someone took it over. Our pastor
backslid and quit preaching. We don't go anywhere; just here and there.
While you're here we're coming over here."

I said, "Where do you pay your tithes?"


"Oh, we quit. We used to pay tithes, but we don't anymore. We used to pay
tithes to our pastor, but he backslid."

I said, "There's no use in your backsliding just because he did." I don't know
whether they appreciated it or not, but I said, "You need to get in somewhere
and work for God, and worship the Lord.

A rolling stone never gathers any moss, as we say."

We need each other. We need the fellowship of one another.

Someone said, "Oh Brother Hagin, I can stay at home and be as good a
Christian as anybody."

You can't do it. The Bible says, "Not forsaking the assembling of ourselves
together, as the manner of some is; but exhorting one another: and so much
the more, as ye see the day approaching" (Hebrews 10:25).

We see that day approaching—the coming of the Lord. We need one another.
We need to grow up. We need to esteem earthly things lightly. We need to
put God first.

We don't go to church because we're in love with the pastor or the wife of the
pastor, or the Sunday School teacher. We should go because we love God and
want to worship Him.

People sometimes lose their children because they don't put first things first.
The children grow up physically and get away from God, because the wrong
example was set for them.

We were visiting my wife's folks in Sherman, Texas one Christmas when my


daughter was only six years old. Christmas was on Saturday. The next
day was Sunday. I was to preach about fifty-seven miles away. It was raining
and disagreeable. When you'd get out it would seem to go right through you.

Sunday morning my mother-in-law said, "I'll keep Pat. Just leave her here.
She has a hacking cough and it feels like she may have a little bit of fever."

I said, "No, we're not going to leave her. We prayed and believed God. And
besides that when we came over here yesterday she had that same little
hacking cough. Actually she's much better today. If we don't take her to
Sunday School and church this morning, then we'll leave the impression on a
little six year old that it's more important to eat Christmas dinner with
Grandma than to go to church on Sunday morning. And that's not what I
believe."

Do you see where people lose their children? And why they grow up and
become unfaithful in church?

You can't just tell them. The Bible says, "Train up a child in the way he
should go: and when he is old, he will not depart from it" (Proverbs 22:6).

F.F. Bosworth said, "Some people wonder why they can't have faith for
healing. They feed their body three hot meals a day, and their spirit one cold
snack a week."

Determine in your heart to put spiritual things first.

First things first. Esteem earthly things lightly, even if it's your own relatives.
Put God before them. Put God before your own self-life. You will be blessed
spiritually, and better off physically—both you and your family as well.

Deadness to Censure or Praise

"But with me it is a very small thing that I should be judged of you, or of


man's judgment: yea, I judge not mine own self. For I know nothing by
myself; yet am I not hereby justified: but he that judgeth me is the Lord."

—I Corinthians 4:3-4

Paul had grown in grace to such an extent that he sought only to commend
himself to God. He was not influenced or affected by what others thought of
him.

He did not get in bondage to anybody. It was not a carnal independence—but


a saintly dignity.

The law of love governed him. He was not easily puffed up, nor was he
touchy or resentful. His spirit—where the love of God was shed abroad—
dominated him.

Immature Christians will feel slighted or puffed up.

If they are criticized—or even imagine that they are—they are restless,
uneasy, and full of self-pity. On the other hand, if they are noticed and
appreciated they feel lifted up and full of self-importance.

Baby Christians are self-conscious. And ever-conscious of what others are


thinking about them.

Therefore they are "tossed to and fro" childishly trying to be popular.

The mature believer is God-conscious. And ever-conscious of what God's


Word says about him and to him. Because he is able to testify with Paul, "It is
a very small thing that I should be judged of you or man's judgment," he is
free to walk in and voice his convictions.

He fits the description given in the Amplified translation of I Corinthians


13:5. He is not conceited—arrogant and inflated with pride. He is not touchy
or fretful or resentful. He takes no account of the evil done to him—pays no
attention to a suffered wrong.

Ability to Recognize God at Work

One of the best spiritual examples of this characteristic is Joseph.

You remember how he saw certain things happening in a dream and his
brothers became jealous of him. They were going to kill him, but finally just
sold him into slavery. He was taken into Egypt, where eventually he stood
and refused to bow to the wishes of his master's wife and was thrown into
prison. He stayed in prison seven years.

Most people would have become bitter and said, "God has forsaken me after
these seven years."

He interpreted a dream for a fellow prisoner—Pharaoh's butler—that in three


days the butler would be lifted up and restored. Joseph asked the butler to
make mention of him to Pharaoh when he was delivered. The butler was
released as Joseph said, but he forgot Joseph. It was two years more before
Joseph got out.

In those two years most folks would have grown bitter saying, "That's the
way it is. You try to help folks and they won't help you."

But the time came when Joseph was brought out of prison. And eventually he
was made prime minister of Egypt.

A famine back in his home country caused his father to send his brothers to
Egypt in search of food.

They had to be brought before him because he was prime minister.

They didn't know him. But he recognized them; the very ones who had sold
him into slavery. He didn't tell them who he was but asked, "Is your father
well, the old man of whom ye spake?" They answered that he was in good
health.

Benjamin hadn't come with them. So Joseph said to them, "Hereby ye shall
be proved: By the life of Pharaoh ye shall not go forth hence, except your
youngest brother come hither."

They went back and told their father, "The man did solemnly protest unto us,
saying, Ye shall not see my face, except your brother be with you."

Poor old Jacob didn't know that it was God. Joseph was gone. And now they
were taking Benjamin. He thought all things were against him. But they
weren't.

They were all for him. He just didn't know it.

When you're hungry, you'll do about anything, so Benjamin went with them.
When they got there, Joseph made a feast for them. And he announced, "I am
Joseph."

Do you know what happened?


All those fellows hit the floor. That's what Joseph had seen in his dream—his
brothers bowing before him.

Here would have been a fine opportunity for most people, who weren't
spiritually mature and still babies, to have really shown off. Here would have
been a perfect opportunity for Joseph to have stuck his thumbs in his galluses
and said, "Well boys, look me over. Remember those dreams I had? They
came to pass."

But Joseph had magnanimity of soul. He said in effect, "Don't worry about it,
God did it." He said, "Be not grieved, nor angry with yourselves, that ye sold
me hither: for God did send me before you to preserve you a posterity in the
earth, and to save your lives by a great deliverance" (Genesis 45:5, 7).

When you can see God at work in things, you can rejoice whatever is going
on!

PART II

Chapter 5

WALKING WITH YOUR FATHER

"Therefore I say unto you, Take no thought for your life, what ye shall eat, or
what ye shall drink; nor yet for your body, what ye shall put on. Is not the life
more than meat, and the body than raiment?

Behold the fowls of the air: for they sow not, neither do they reap, nor gather
into barns; yet your heavenly Father feedeth them. Are ye not much better
than they?

Which of you by taking thought can add one cubit unto his stature?

And why take ye thought for raiment?

Consider the lilies of the field, how they grow; they toil not, neither do they
spin: And yet I say unto you, That even Solomon in all his glory was not
arrayed like one of these.
Wherefore, if God so clothe the grass of the field, which today is, and
tomorrow is cast into the oven, shall he not much more clothe you, 0 ye of
little faith?

Therefore take no thought, saying, What shall we eat? or, What shall we
drink? or, Wherewithal shall we be clothed?

(For after all these things do the Gentiles seek:) for your heavenly Father
knoweth that ye have need of all these things.

But seek ye first the kingdom of God, and his righteousness; and all these
things shall be added unto you.

Take therefore no thought for the morrow: for the morrow shall take thought
for the things of itself. Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof."

—Matthew 6:25-34

This is a marvelous section of scripture. But for the time being there are just
two portions of it I want you to notice. In the 32nd verse, "for your heavenly
Father knoweth that ye have need of all these things." And in the 26th verse,
"your heavenly Father feedeth them."

This isn't talking about sinners (unbelievers) here, because He is not the
heavenly Father of sinners. To listen to some people talk we are all children
of God; God is the Father of all of us, and we're all brothers and sisters. But
no, we are not. The devil is the father of some people.

Jesus said to some of the most religious people of that day, "Ye are of your
father the devil" (John 8:44).

He didn't say our heavenly Father was their father. He said the devil was their
father.

Yet even though we have been born-again, and have become children of God,
I think so many times we have never really become acquainted with our
Father. Our theme is growing—growing up spiritually.

We need to grow by becoming acquainted with our heavenly Father.


When I was teaching down in East Texas on this subject a woman said to me,
"Brother Hagin, I've been saved for eleven years. And ever since I've been
saved I've loved Jesus. But somehow I just didn't become acquainted with the
Father like I should. Since you've been teaching along this line though, I have
become acquainted with my Heavenly Father. And I'm just about to love Him
to death."

That was her expression.

There is no truth in all the Bible as far reaching as the blessed fact that if we
have been born-again and come into the family of God, God the Father is our
Father, and He cares for us.

He is interested in us. I mean in each one of us individually; not just as a


group, or a body, or a church. He is interested in each of His children and He
loves every single one of us with the same love.

Jesus was actually preaching here in Matthew to the Jews. Yet one reason
they didn't understand Him was, He talked about God as being His Father. He
endeavored to introduce to them a kind, loving, Heavenly Father. They
couldn't understand that kind of a God. His message was, "For God so loved
the world that He gave...." They couldn't comprehend it.

The Old Covenant was the covenant of the law of sin and death. It was the
law of an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth. You knock my eye out and
I'll knock your eye out.

It was the law where God demanded, in awful judgment, love and so forth.
They were not able to do it because their natures had not been changed. So
He set up the Levitical priesthood whereby the blood of animals could be
shed to cover their sins so they could be counted righteous in His sight and
He could bless them. The sins of the people could be confessed over the head
of the scapegoat. The goat let go in the wilderness. And judgment fell out
there instead of on them. They had come up in this hard, harsh atmosphere of
justice.

When God gave Moses the tables of stone of the law, fire and vapor of smoke
overshadowed the mountain. If even an animal touched it he was
thrust through with a sword.

In the Old Testament after they built the tabernacle first and the temple
secondly, they didn't know Him as Father God. They knew Him as Elohim,
or Jehovah.

They did not know Him personally. They had no personal acquaintance with
Him. His Presence was kept shut up in the Holy of Holies. It was necessary
that every male throughout Israel, at least once a year, go up to Jerusalem to
the temple to present himself before God. That's where He was. And even
then they didn't dare enter into His Presence.

No one entered His Presence save the high priest.

And he only under great precaution. For if you intruded into that place in the
wrong way, and some did, you fell down dead instantly. This high priest,
after offering sacrifice by the blood of animals for his own sins and the sins
of the people, could enter into the Holy of Holies and receive atonement for
their sins—pushing them off, so to speak, into the future.

That was the hard, harsh atmosphere they had come up in. It is no wonder
that when Jesus came along to introduce them to a loving, kind, Heavenly
Father, they couldn't understand it.

But I'm afraid that is not only true concerning those Jews—I'm afraid it is
true concerning the sons and daughters of Almighty God today. They have
never really become acquainted with Him as being their Father.

Here are some of the things Jesus said about the Father.

"And in that day ye shall ask me nothing. Verily, verily, I say unto you,
Whatsoever ye shall ask the Father in my name, he will give it you" (John
16:23).

"For the Father himself loveth you...." (John 16:27).

"...for your Father knoweth what things ye have need of, before ye ask him.
After this manner therefore pray ye: Our Father...." (Matthew 6:8-9). Notice
the utter tenderness of it, "Our Father...."

I like something Paul said when he prayed for the church at Ephesus. He
began his prayer like this, "For this cause I bow my knees unto the Father of
our Lord Jesus Christ, of whom the whole family in heaven and earth is
named" (Ephesians 3:14-15).

Oh, I like to do that. I like to get on my knees and repeat those words of Paul,
"I bow my knees unto the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, of whom the
whole family in heaven and earth is named." That makes it so real. It takes it
out of a hard, harsh religious atmosphere. This isn't religion. It hasn't a thing
in the world to do with religion.

Some folks say, "Do you have religion?"

Thank God, I don't have a bit of it. I don't want any. When it's religion, it's
"God"—but when it's family, it's "Father."

He may be "God" to the sinner, but He's "Father"

to me. "I bow my knees unto the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, of whom
the whole family...." It becomes the Father and His family! We are in the
family of God. It's not important what church you are in—the thing that's
important is what family you are in.

Getting Acquainted Through the Word

I'm glad I'm in His family. I want to become better acquainted with my
Father, don't you? I want to know Him better, don't you? Thank God, we can.

How? How can we know more about Him? How can we become better
acquainted with our Father?

I like something Smith Wigglesworth said, "I can't understand God by


feelings. I understand God the Father by what the Word says about Him. He
is everything the Word says He is. Get acquainted with the Father through the
Word."
It is in the Word that we find out about Him, about His love, about His
nature, about how He cares for us, about how He loves us. Jesus himself said,
"Man shall not live by bread alone—(How shall he live?)—but by every
word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God."

MATTHEW 6:26

26 Behold the fowls of the air: for they sow not, neither do they reap, nor
gather into barns; yet your heavenly Father feedeth them. Are ye not much
better than they?

The folks Jesus was preaching to never grasped it.

It was new to them. It's almost new to us. We've never grasped it, because
most of us have been taught to fear and shrink from a God of justice. We
have never seen the love side of God that Jesus came to bring us.

MATTHEW 6:30-31

30 Wherefore, if God so clothe the grass of the field, which today is, and
tomorrow is cast into the oven, shall he not much more clothe you, O ye of
little faith?

31 Therefore take no thought, saying, What shall we eat? or, What shall we
drink? or, Wherewithal shall we be clothed?

One translation says, "Be therefore not faithless saying, What shall we eat?
or, What shall we drink?...." When you talk that way you are without faith.

MATTHEW 6:32-33

32 (For after all these things do the Gentiles seek;) for your heavenly Father
knoweth that ye have need of all these things.

33 But seek ye first the kingdom of God, and his righteousness; and all these
things shall be added unto you.

They won't be taken from you—they'll be added to you! This proves the
Father cares for His own.
MATTHEW 6:34

34 Take therefore no thought for the morrow: for the morrow shall take
thought for the things of itself. Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof.

I like the translation that reads, "Be not anxious for the morrow." Sometimes
you do have to think about tomorrow to make an appointment or plan
something.

Really the thought He's trying to get over is, "Don't worry about tomorrow."
God doesn't want His children full of worry. He doesn't want us full of
fretting. Why?

Because He loves us.

Your Heavenly Father knoweth that you have need of these things. So have
no worry, no fret, no anxiety.

If He is your Father, you can be assured He will take a father's place and will
perform a father's part. You may be certain that if He is your Father, He loves
you, and He will care for you.

JOHN 14:21-23

21 He that hath my commandments, and keepeth them, he it is that loveth


me: and he that loveth me shall be loved of my Father, and I will love him,
and will manifest myself to him.

22 Judas saith unto him, not Iscariot, Lord, how is it that thou wilt manifest
thyself unto us, and not unto the world?

23 Jesus answered and said unto him, If a man love me, he will keep my
words: and my Father will love him, and we will come unto him, and make
our abode with him.

Here we have the revelation of the Father's attitude toward His own children.
Two things are emphasized: 1. That you keep my commandments. What are
Jesus' commandments? He said, "A new commandment I give unto you, That
ye love one another; as I have loved you...." (John 13:34). That sums it up.
There's no use worrying about any other commandments for "...love is the
fulfilling of the law"

(Romans 13:10). If you keep Jesus' commandments, you will have fulfilled
all the rest of the commandments.

2. You shall be loved of my father. If you walk in love, you walk in God's
realm, for God is Love. (We'll go into the love-walk further in chapter six.)
The great Father God is a love God. His very nature—because He is Love—
compels Him to care for us, protect us, and shield us.

MATTHEW 7:11

11 If ye then, being evil, know how to give good gifts unto your children,
how much more shall your Father which is in heaven give good things to
them that ask him?

How much morel That sends a thrill through my spirit. How much more! Are
you a parent? Would you have it as your plan, purpose and will that your
children go through life poverty-stricken, nose-to-the-grindstone, sick,
afflicted, downtrodden, downcast, down-and-out? No! Parents will sacrifice
because they love their children. They'll work and sacrifice to help their
children gain an education so they can have things better in life than they had.
They want to shield them, because they love them, from some of the bumps
and knocks and hard times they had. Just natural folks are that way. That's
what Jesus said. "If ye then, being evil (or natural)...."

Our relationship as sons and daughters is a challenge to His love. We hold the
same relationship to the Father that Jesus did when He walked on earth.

JOHN 17:23

23 I in them, and thou in me, that they may be made perfect in one; and that
the world may know that thou hast sent me, and hast loved them, as thou hast
loved me.

The Father loves us just as He loved Jesus! And if He loves me as He loves


Jesus, I'm not afraid to face life's problems. For He is with me as He was with
the Master.

JOHN 16:32

32 Behold, the hour cometh, yea, is now come, that ye shall be scattered,
every man to his own, and shall leave me alone: and yet I am not alone,
because the Father is with me.

You and I can say, "I am not alone, because the Father is with me." For if He
loves me as He loved Jesus, then He's with me as He was with Jesus. I am not
alone.

JOHN 16:27

27 For the Father himself loveth you, because ye have loved me, and have
believed that I came out from God.

Nothing can be stronger or more comforting than this fact: The Father
Himself knows you, and He loves you, and He longs to bless you.

Against the background of all these statements Jesus made relative to the
Father, other scriptures take on new light; they become immediately more
real to us.

I PETER 5:7

7 Casting all your care upon him; for he careth for you.

This is a message from the very heart of the Father God to me, to you. He
wants us to end worry—to end fear and doubt. You might say, "Can I do it?"

Certainly. "How?" By casting all your care upon Him.

He wants you to abandon yourself to His love and His care so He said,
"Casting all your care upon Him, for He careth for you." Or, as the Amplified
translation reads, and I love this, "Casting the whole of your care—all your
anxieties, all your worries, all your concerns, once and for all—on Him; for
He cares for you affectionately, and cares about you watchfully."
PHILIPPIANS 4:6

6 Be careful for nothing; but in every thing by prayer and supplication with
thanksgiving let your requests be made known unto God.

Again, the Amplified translation says, "Do not fret or have any anxiety about
anything,...." That's our Father speaking to us. Our Heavenly Father wants to
walk with us just as He walked with Jesus when He was here on the earth.

PHILIPPIANS 4:13

13 I can do all things through Christ which strengtheneth me.

Some have said, "Yes, but Paul said that and he was an Apostle." Paul didn't
say he could do all things because he was an Apostle. He said he could do
all things through Christ. Paul wasn't in Christ any more than I am in Christ,
or any more than you are in Christ.

It was Christ who strengthened him. And the Father is just as real—if we let
Him be—to us as He was to Paul, or even to Jesus. And He's sending a
message from His heart of Love to you and me. He's telling us: You can do
anything. You can rise to the place where you're unafraid in the most
unpleasant circumstances because you know that your Father is on your side.
"If God be for us, who can be against us?" (Romans 8:31).

The Father's love—and remember He is Love—compels Him to care for us.


When you come to know His love and to swing free in that love, then all
doubts and fears will be destroyed.

PSALM 27:1

1 The Lord is my light and my salvation; whom shall I fear? the Lord is the
strength of my life; of whom shall I be afraid?

When you remember it is this wonderful Heavenly Father who loves us even
as He loved Jesus, then you can understand that we need not be afraid, even
as Jesus was not afraid. He is your Light. He is your Deliverance. (Salvation
in this verse means deliverance.) He is the Strength of your life. Light!
Deliverance! Strength! Then there's nothing to fear.

What can man do to the man whom God loves and protects?

HEBREWS 13:5-6

5 ...for he hath said, I will never leave thee, nor forsake thee.

6 So that we may boldly say, The Lord is my helper, and I will not fear what
man shall do unto me.

He's your Helper! And He will meet your needs!

PHILIPPIANS 4:19

19 But my God shall supply all your need according to his riches in glory by
Christ Jesus.

This is not religion. It's not preaching. It's a living truth from the heart of our
wonderful, lovely, Father God to us. He wants us to know that He will supply
all our needs according to His riches in glory by Christ Jesus.

Experiencing Acquaintance

PSALM 23:1-6

1 The Lord is my shepherd; I shall not want.

2 He maketh me to lie down in green pastures: he leadeth me beside the still


waters.

3 He restoreth my soul: he leadeth me in the paths of righteousness for his


name's sake.

4 Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no
evil: for thou art with me; thy rod and thy staff they comfort me.

5 Thou preparest a table before me in the presence of mine enemies: thou


anointest my head with oil; my cup runneth over.
6 Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life: and I
will dwell in the house of the Lord for ever.

To me, no passage describes the love-attitude of the Father and Jesus toward
us more beautifully than the 23rd Psalm.

Many Psalms are prophetic. The 22nd Psalm is a picture of Jesus dying. In
the 23rd Psalm He is the Good Shepherd. The 24th Psalm shows Him as the
coming King of kings and Lord of lords upon this earth.

We are living in the 23rd Psalm right now. "The Lord is my shepherd." When
Jesus came He said, "I am (present tense) the good shepherd." Romans
10:9 says, "That if thou shalt confess with thy mouth the Lord Jesus, (or,
Jesus as Lord)...." The Lord is my shepherd. Now. We live in the 23rd Psalm.

This is my interpretation of the 23rd Psalm, I always say it this way: "The
Lord is my shepherd, I do not want." I do not want. Perfect satisfaction. The
ultimate of living.

Verse 2 is where the luscious clover and tender grass carpet the ground. No
effort on my part is required to have or to get enough.

He leads me beside the water, waters of stillness.

Water and food are the requisites that sustain life.

Thank God, He leads me, He leadeth me, He supplies every need.

He makes me lie down and rest in safety and quietness in the pastures of
plenty. Near me is a babbling brook. Its Living Waters answer the cry of my
heart. I have water. I have food. I have protection.

I have shelter. I have His care. This is my Father.

When I am frightened and filled with fear, when my whole being is


convulged with agony, He restoreth my soul. He keeps me quiet. He makes
me normal again. He brushes away my fears and anxieties, holds me to His
breast, and breathes into me courage and faith.
My heart laughs at my enemies, for He guideth me down the paths of grace
through the realm of righteousness where I stand in His Presence as though
sin had never been; and romp and play in the throne room of grace with never
a thought, nor a fear, nor a dread. My Father, you see, is the One who is on
the throne.

He may be Judge to the world, and God to the sinner, but He's Father to me.

And sometimes I come in, most of the time in fact to visit with Him and I
hear Him say, "Son, is there anything you want? What can I do for you?"

And I say, "Father, I don't want a thing. You're so wonderful, and so lovely,
and so good you've already provided for me all I'll ever need. And you wrote
me a letter and told me about it. So I don't have a care. I don't have a need. I
don't have a want that hasn't been met. No, I didn't come for something. I'll
tell you, Father, I just came in to visit with you for awhile. I just wanted to
hang around the throne. I like to be near you, Father."

My Father said to me (Oh, I could hear His voice so plainly as He spoke to


me), "Son, you don't know how that delights my heart. No earthly father ever
desired the companionship and the fellowship of his children any more than I,
the Heavenly Father, desire the fellowship and companionship of my
children.

"You know," He said to me, "I made man so I'd have someone to fellowship
with. I made man for my companion. In fact, I'll put it this way (and He said
it in just these words), I made man so I'd have someone to pal with. I put
Adam on the earth in the garden, and in the cool of the day, I'd go down and
walk and talk with him."

It is so blessed and so beautiful and so wonderful to be able to walk with


God.

Chapter 6

WALKING IN LOVE
"...the love of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Ghost...."

—Romans 5:5

To fellowship with God, to walk with God, to walk in God's realm, we must
walk in love. Divine Love.

For God is Love.

When I was born-again, He became my Father. He is a Love God. I am a


Love child of a Love God. I'm born of God, and God is Love, so I am born of
Love.

The nature of God is in me. And the nature of God is Love.

We can't say we don't have this Divine Love.

Everyone in the family has it, or else they're not in the family. They may not
be exercising it. They may be like the one-talent guy that wrapped his talent
in a napkin and buried it. But the Bible says that the Love of God has been
shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Ghost. That means the God-kind of
hove has been shed abroad in our hearts, our spirits. This is a Love family.

Jesus said, "By this shall all men know that ye are my disciples—(How are
they going to know it?)—if ye have love one to another" (John 13:35). That's
the way they're going to know us.

This kind of Love is not selfish. "God so loved the world that he gave...."

The love law of the family of God is. "That ye love one another; as I have
loved you," (John 13:34). How did He love us? Because we deserved it? No!
He loved us while we were yet unlovely. He loved us while we were yet
sinners. The Bible says so.

(And think about this. If God loved us with so great love when we were
sinners, when we were unlovely, when we were His enemies, do you think
He loves His children any less? No, a thousand times no.)

"Loves" Compared: Divine—Natural Human


This Love we're talking about is Divine Love, not natural human love. We
hear a lot today about natural human love, but there is simply no love in this
old world like the Love of God. Natural human love is selfish. I've heard
people say, "A mother's love is akin to the love of God." I thought that at one
time. But it isn't so. As a usual thing a mother's love is a natural human love.
And as a usual thing, it's selfish. "That's my baby."

"Oh, I love my children, I love them," a woman came crying to me saying, "I
want you to pray for them. I've brought them up right here in this church, and
I don't understand it. Not a one of them will come except my girl."

One of her daughters played the piano and she was the only one who came.
In fact, one of the boys had just run away from home.

She said, "There isn't anyone in this church that loved their children any more
than I did."

I said, "Sister, there has to be a reason. I'm a stranger here, just an evangelist,
but I can see this poor girl here on the piano bench. You've smothered her
with your 'love.' And I'll guarantee the reason the rest of them ran off is
because you wouldn't let them out from under your coattail. You wanted to
run their lives entirely. (I'd look at this girl at the piano and she'd duck her
head. She didn't know how to act.) I dare say your daughter has never had a
boy friend in her life, or a girl friend either."

"Well no," she said, "I just always kept her at home. I thought I could raise
her up better."

I said, "No, you couldn't. Her personality is twisted."

Natural human mother love; but it was selfish. She didn't have her children's
interests at heart. She had her interests at heart. She wanted to keep them with
her.

Have you ever noticed that mothers-in-law rarely have trouble with sons-in-
law? It's usually with daughters-in-law. Many times that mother just feels
there is no girl anywhere good enough for "my boy."
Oh yes, she may be saved, filled with the Holy Ghost, and talking in tongues
every night, but instead of letting the Love of God in her heart dominate her,
she is letting the natural human love in her flesh dominate her. Constantly
picking. Constantly saying things.

The reason mother-in-law and daughter-in-law have trouble—if they don't


walk in Love—is that for years that mother was the main one in the life of
this boy. She wants to keep on telling him what to do. And now the wife
wants to tell him what to do. They can't both tell him what to do. And he's in
a dilemma.

The Love of God is in our hearts, but it may be like the talent that was
wrapped in a napkin and hidden in the earth. We may not use it, but that Love
of God is in our hearts.

If we would use it, and learn to let that love dominate us, it would make a
difference in our lives. It would cure the ills in our homes. This kind of Love
has never been to a divorce court, and will never go. It was natural human
love that went there. Natural human love can turn to hatred when it doesn't
get its way. It will fight and fuss, claw and knock, cuss and be mean. Divine
Love, when it is reviled, revileth not again. I didn't say Christians haven't
been to a divorce court; they have. But they weren't letting the Love of God
dominate them.

God wants us to grow. And thank God, we can grow in Love. The Bible
speaks of being made perfect, or mature, in Love. No, we haven't been made
perfect in Love yet, but we can be and some of us are on our way.

The God-kind of Love is not interested in what I can get—but in what I can
give. Do you see how that can solve all the problems in your home?

Too many are selfish. And even though they are Christians, they let the
natural dominate them. "What can I get." "I'm not going to take this." "I'm not
going to take that." "I'm not going to put up with this." "I."

"I." "I." "I."

It's true in churches. In the second church I pastored I was twenty and single
so I rented a room from a couple in the church. The man knew the Bible and
had a marvelous experience with God. But he was the type that said, "I've got
my say-so, and I'm going to have it. I'm a member of that church just as much
as anyone else and I've got my say-so." He had his say-so, and so did some
others, until everything was wrecked.

I only stayed six months. God told me to tell them that unless they repented
the time would come when they wouldn't have a church. Through the first
prophetic utterance I ever had He said, "I'll remove their candlestick. If they
don't repent, the doors of this church will be closed within one year. They
will remain closed two years, and then they will open up again. I'll give them
one more chance. If they don't make it then, this church building will be
moved off this church lot."

They got mad. They were about ready to do to me the same thing those folks
were ready to do to Jesus in His hometown of Nazareth. They were ready to
throw Him off the brow of the hill. They reported what I'd said to some of the
elders of the movement, and they wanted to boot me out, but were a little
afraid to.

However, at the end of the year, just as He said, the doors of that church
closed for two years. A padlock was on it. Then a fellow opened it up again.
And God gave them a certain amount of time. But they didn't walk in the
light and it shut down. It came to pass just as God said. I could take you there
and show you a lot with no church today, and it still belongs to that particular
movement.

Through the years there were enough of them to have a church. But they
couldn't. Because they couldn't get along among themselves. They never
got above the babyhood stage of Christianity. They remained babies. They
didn't grow.

As children of God the nature of God is in us. And God's nature is Love. So it
is natural for us, spiritually, to Love. But if I let my outward man and my
mind dominate me, that Love nature in my heart is kept prisoner. Let's release
the Love of God that's within us.

An Expose' on Love
What about this God-kind of Love? What are its characteristics? They're
given to us in I Corinthians 13.

It is to be regretted that the King James translates the Greek word for divine
love, agape, as charity. My favorite translation of this "Expose' on Love" is
the Amplified. Let's look into it in the Amplified beginning with verse 4:

"Love endures long and is patient and kind;" A lot of people endure long—
but they aren't patient and kind while they do it. They just suffer long because
they have to. "I've suffered all I'm going to. I'm not going to have it this way
any more."

"Love never is envious nor boils over with jealousy;"

It's natural human love that is jealous. This kind of love doesn't boil over with
jealousy.

"Love is not boastful or vainglorious, does not display itself haughtily. It is


not conceited—arrogant and inflated with pride; it is not rude (unmannerly),
and does not act unbecomingly."

"Love (God's love in us) does not insist on its own rights or its own way, for it
is not self-seeking;"

I wish you would take time to let that soak in.

"Well, I know what's mine though. I've got my say-so and I'm going to have
it. I've got my rights and I'm going to have them." No matter how much they
may hurt someone else.

This says Love doesn't insist on its own rights.

We'll never make it until we start believing in God, and believing in Love. It's
the best way!

And it's your way!

"(Love) is not touchy or fretful or resentful; it takes no account of the evil


done to it—pays no attention to a suffered wrong."
Here is the Love thermometer. Here is the Love gauge. It's very easy to find
out whether or not you're walking in Love. When you begin to take account
of the evil done to you, you're not walking in Love. As long as you walk in
God and stay full of the Spirit, you won't take account of the evil done to you.

Through the years things have happened to me, just as they have to you. And
I've had ministers, and even relatives tell me, "I wouldn't take that.

I wouldn't put up with that. Not me." But I just kept my mouth shut and never
said a word, smiled and stayed happy. Why? I wouldn't take time to deny it if
they told on me I killed my grandma. I'd just keep shouting, "Hallelujah!

Praise God! Glory to God!" Just go on. You'll come out on top in the long
run.

Even ministers have told me, "There must be a weakness in your character.
You never take up for yourself." No, it's a strength. Because Love never fails.
Many have failed; and have even died prematurely because they lived so in
the natural they couldn't take advantage of the privileges and rights of a child
of God which belonged to them. They were always fussing and fighting until
it had an effect on their bodies.

"(Love) takes no account of the evil done to it."

That has to be the God-kind of Love because we were enemies of God, and
God didn't take account of the evil we had done to Him. He sent Jesus to
redeem us. He loved us while we were yet sinners.

"(Love) pays no attention to a suffered wrong."

As an old boy down in Georgia said, "You might as well come up to the
licklog and admit it's so," there aren't too many people walking in Love—in
God's Love, in Christ's Love—even though they have it. They're walking in
natural human love. And they sure pay attention to a suffered wrong. They
get all puffed. A husband and wife, both Christians, will get mad and won't
speak for a week because of some wrong. I know I'm

on your toes, but I just want to stand there a while.


Can't you see how it would straighten things out for us in the home, the
church, the nation, for men to become children of God and get the Love of
God in them, and then live in the family of God as children of God?

"(Love) does not rejoice at injustice and unrighteousness, but rejoices when
right and truth prevail."

"Love bears up under anything and everything that comes."

Someone said, "I just can't take it any longer."

Love can. "I just can't put up with him any longer." Think about God. He's
putting up with all of us. "I've taken just about all I can take."

That's old natural human love. The Love of God in you bears up under
everything.

"(Love) is ever ready to believe the best of every person."

Natural human love is ready to believe the worst of every person. It's ever
ready to believe the worst about the husband, the worst about the wife, the
worst about the children. But this God-kind of Love is ever ready to believe
the best of every person; husband, wife, brother or sister in the church,
children. Believe the best of every person.

I've traveled across the country in the ministry.

It's amazing what you hear on this preacher and that preacher, this person and
that person, this deacon and that deacon, this Sunday School teacher and that
Sunday School teacher, this singer and that singer. I never pay the least bit of
attention to any of them. I don't believe a word of it. I believe the best of
everyone.

Children ought to have the right to be brought up in this kind of a Love


atmosphere. They'll go out in life's fight and win then. But when you see the
worst in your children, always telling them, "You'll never amount to
anything. You won't do this and you won't do that," they'll live up to what
you say. Though they may have missed it, when you see the best in them and
love them rightly it will bring the best out of them. They will amount to
something.

"(Love's) hopes are fadeless under all circumstances and it endures


everything (without weakening). Love never fails—never fades out or
becomes obsolete or comes to an end."

If you walk in love you will not fail. Love never fails!

We are interested in spiritual gifts and we ought to be. But we ought to be


interested in Love first. Prophecies will fail. Tongues shall cease.

Knowledge shall vanish away. But, thank God, Love never fails.

Oh yes, I believe in prophecy and prophesying.

I believe in tongues. Thank God for it. But you can exercise these things
outside of Love and they become as sounding brass and tinkling cymbal.

The thing about it is: Let's have prophecy. Let's have tongues. Let's have
faith. Let's have knowledge. But let's have Love with it. Let's put Love first
because we are in the family of Love and have become acquainted with our
Heavenly Father who is a God of Love.

We ought to want to learn. We ought to want to grow. We ought to want to


grow in Love until we are made perfect in Love. I haven't been made perfect
in love yet, have you? But did you know the Bible says we can? Not in the
next world, but in this world. I believe some of us are going to make it. I'm
not going to quit just because I haven't made it yet. I'm going to keep after it.
Thank God for His Word! Thank God for His Love!

PART III

Chapter 7

RECEIVING THE KNOWLEDGE

' Till we all come in the unity of the faith, and of the knowledge of the Son of
God, unto a perfect man..."

—Ephesians 4:13

How is that going to come about?

I guess we all want to be mature spiritually, but just wanting to be doesn't


make it so. How are we to grow spiritually?

We've already pointed out I Peter 2:2, "As newborn babes, desire the sincere
milk of the word, that ye may grow thereby." God starts us in the spiritual,
just like folks get started in the natural. When babies are born they start off
on milk. They certainly couldn't eat meat.

And God says that this sincere milk of the Word will cause us to grow.

Yet there are some things Paul wrote to the Corinthian Christians and to the
Hebrew Christians which are of interest to us.

I CORINTHIANS 3:1-2

1 And I, brethren, could not speak unto you as unto spiritual, but as unto
carnal, even as unto babes in Christ.

2 I have fed you with milk, and not with meat: for hitherto ye were not able
to bear it, neither yet now are ye able.

HEBREWS 5:11-14 (Comments in parentheses)

11 Of whom we have many things to say, and hard to be uttered, seeing ye


are dull of hearing.

(Some things are hard to get over to folks because they are dull of hearing.)

12 For when for the time ye ought to be teachers, ye have need that one teach
you again which be the first principles of the oracles of God; and are become
such as have need of milk, and not of strong meat.

13 For every one that useth milk is unskilful in the word of righteousness
(The margin reads 'hath no experience in the word of righteousness.' Now
why has he no experience in the word of righteousness?): for he is a babe.

14 But strong meat belongeth to them that are of full age (mature), even those
who by reason of use have their senses exercised to discern both good and
evil.

They had the same problem then we face now—that of growing. They were
just like us. They should have been teachers, but they still needed to be
taught.

They couldn't be taught anything very deep, but still had to be taught the
milk. Paul said, "I fed you on milk for you couldn't take the meat."

The milk of the Word he's talking about here is the preaching and staying
with the first principles of the doctrine of Christ (Hebrews 6:1-2). Paul calls
that the milk of the Word, not the strong meat. When you still have to be
taught the first principles, you are still on the milk. It seems to me that's about
what we've done—and about what we've had to do.

But how are we going to grow up? Look back at this clause in Ephesians 4:13
which speaks about growing in "the knowledge of the Son of God" unto a
perfect man.

Receiving the knowledge, feeding upon God's Word: Until you gain a
knowledge of the plan of God which He planned and sent the Lord Jesus to
consummate...Until you gain a knowledge of what you are in Christ, and
Christ in you...Until you gain a knowledge of what He did for you in His
death, burial, resurrection, ascension, and seating at the right hand of the
Father...Until you gain a knowledge of what He's doing for you right now,
seated at the right hand of the Father where He ever liveth to make
intercession for you...Until you gain a knowledge of your standing before the
throne of God...Until you gain a knowledge of the fact that He defeated Satan
and demons, and that all the forces of the rulers of the darkness of this world
are dethroned powers, and that they can't rule over you.

When you do that, you're getting out beyond milk.


But you can't preach that to some folks. You can't get too deep in there. To be
honest with you, I know a lot of things I've never taught yet. Why not? Folks
have to be ready for it. (Paul said in effect, "There are some things I'd like to
teach you, but you couldn't bear it."

They couldn't take it.) And I don't mean it's some far fetched revelation. It is
the pure simple Word of God.

But it is beyond where we have been. So we have to go slowly so folks can


assimilate what we do give them.

The Wrong Diet

Why haven't we grown?

If we are real children of God, born of God, and we haven't grown, it is


because we haven't had the right diet.

I don't blame people. I'm not scolding you. I'm thoroughly convinced the
ministry is to blame. I believe most people—99.99 out of 100—would rise to
the level of the Word of God for them if they knew it.

But just because a man is one of the ministry gifts

—apostle, prophet, evangelist, pastor, teacher—doesn't mean he's a full


grown Christian. It just means he has that calling on his life. He still has to
develop and grow himself.

In the last church I pastored, during the winter of 1947 and 1948, I shut
myself up in the church, sometimes for days at a time, with the Word. I
would kneel and read the Bible on my knees. I read for hours, and for weeks.
I had read it for years, of course, but this time I took those two prayers Paul
prayed for the church at Ephesus—Ephesians 1:17-19, and 3:14-21.

I would leave one of my Bibles open to that place all week. And every time I
came into the building I would get on my knees and say, "Father, I'm praying
these prayers for myself." If I had to make a call or something arose, when I'd
come back, even though I may have already done it several times that day, I'd
pray these prayers for myself. "...That the eyes of my understanding be
enlightened, that I may know what is the hope of His calling,...." And so on.

It didn't seem to do a bit of good for a while. But I just kept on praying them.
Then—after a while—I began to get revelation from the Word. (He couldn't
have revealed the Word to me if I hadn't been feeding on it.) It began to open
up to me!

Within a few weeks, 30 days or so, I'd learned more than I'd learned in the
previous 13 or 14 years of ministry put together. I said to my wife, "What in
the world have I been preaching? My, my, my, that little old stuff I've been
putting out wasn't even milk. It was just bluejohn."

This didn't come just because I prayed. That was just a part of it. I spent equal
time, if not more, with the Word as I did praying. You can't build a prayer life
just praying alone. It has to be built upon God's Word.

So when the Bible speaks about our becoming a perfect man, the terminology
"knowledge of the Son of God" is used (Ephesians 4:13). It infers that it is
this knowledge which will cause us to become full grown, and cause us to
become mature.

The Place of Right Teaching

We have failed to grow because of the lack of right teaching. God put
teachers in the church. He set them in there. (Ephesians 4:11, I Corinthians
12:28.)

There are some ways all of us could do some teaching. From the natural
standpoint we could tell some people what we know and could teach them to
some extent. But on the other hand, there are those who are called of God,
and anointed by the Spirit of God, to teach.

Of course, the Holy Ghost is also to be our teacher.

But, after all, that is the Holy Ghost teaching us when He anoints men to
teach. Some people get off on the idea that "No one can tell me anything. I
don't need to be taught. I've got the Holy Ghost and I know as much as
anyone knows." That is ignorance. God's Word declares that He set teachers
in the Church to teach us.

I'm afraid though that much of our so-called teaching has been out of our
minds and not out of our hearts. We've gained a general head knowledge,
mental knowledge, of the Word but never got the spiritual import of it.
Through the years what we've known as teaching has been so cold and dead
and not much to it, we almost turn up our noses at the mention of it.

But the anointing of the Spirit of God upon genuine teaching of the Word of
God is alive!

I didn't know the difference myself one day. I used to be a preacher. I could
preach Spurgeon's sermons as well as anyone. I could read them and preach
them word for word. I learned to sermonize and studied homiletics. I loved to
preach with that old evangelistic fire and fervor. And, once in a while, I crack
down on it and do it yet.

I was pastor of a church in North Central Texas in 1943. I'd never been a
teacher until then. I didn't like to teach. It was their custom in this church that
the pastor have at the Sunday School hour on Sunday morning the auditorium
Bible class. It was made up of adult men and women. I didn't want to teach it.
But it was their custom. I had a Sunday School book which I wouldn't look at
all week. I studied the Bible and prepared sermons, but I wouldn't even look
at this lesson until Saturday night. I knew I could read it over in 10 or 15
minutes and get up and tell it. They all seemed to enjoy it, but I was never so
glad of anything in my life as when that class period was over. I wanted to
preach.

But at 3 o'clock one Thursday afternoon in the parsonage of this church, God
gave me a teaching gift.

I knew it on the inside of me. I knew when it was born.

I said out loud, "I can teach now."

To prove this, I started out in a most unlikely way.


I didn't use any of the other main services where folks would come anyway.
A ladies' prayer group met on Wednesday afternoons at the church and I
started teaching them.

Do you know what surprised me? I could stand there just as still, and never
move out of my tracks, never raise my hands, and the anointing would come
on me greater than anything I ever sensed.

I began to teach those seven or eight ladies. They told their husbands and
others. In two or three weeks, fifteen or twenty were coming. Some of the
husbands took off from their jobs to come. Before you knew it, we had more
people on Wednesday afternoon than on Wednesday night. Before you knew
it, the church building was practically full.

That proved to me people want to learn and want to know.

Several years after I left that church I ran into one of those ladies. She said,
"Thank God for those teaching sessions. That's all I've been living on for the
past seven years. If I hadn't gotten that, I'm sure I would never have made it.
I'm still feeding on it. I've never heard any teaching since then. All we get is
preaching."

We need preaching all right. But believers need teaching. People of God need
teaching.

Come back to Jesus and His ministry for a moment.

MATTHEW 9:35

35 And Jesus went about all the cities and villages, teaching in their
synagogues, and preaching the gospel of the kingdom, and healing every
sickness and every disease among the people.

Reading through the four Gospels, every time He went into the synagogue,
He always taught.

Down by the seashore one day He was teaching.

The crowd pushed Him back to the shore. A couple of fellows were there
washing and mending their nets as they had been fishing. One of them was
Simon Peter.

Jesus asked if He could borrow his boat, got in it and pushed a little way from
shore. And it says, "He sat down and taught the people out of the ship" (Luke
5:3).

After he was baptized and the Holy Ghost came upon Him in the bodily form
as a dove, and He was led by the Spirit into the wilderness and tempted of the
devil. And after He came back in the power of the Spirit into Galilee, Luke
4:15 says, "And he taught in their synagogues, being glorified of all."

These were the people of God of that day. The synagogue would correspond
to the church house of today. Every time He went into it, He taught.

The lack of right teaching is the primary reason we've failed to grow.
Certainly we can study for ourselves and grow to some extent. But God also
put teachers in the Church to help us to grow, to feed us upon God's Word.

The Fault of Inadequate Teaching

The Church has not majored in the things it should have. As one fellow said,
"She has majored in the minors." When something was taught or preached, it
was something of minor importance rather than something of major
importance.

If you're going to grow, you'll have to be fed on the Word of God.

The Church has been strong in teaching man his need of righteousness, his
weakness and inability to please God. It has been strong in denouncing sins
in the believer. It has preached against unbelief, world conformity, and lack
of faith.

But the Church has been sadly lacking in bringing forth the truth of what we
are in Christ, and of how righteousness and faith are available.

A lot of people will tell you what you need, but they won't tell you how to get
it. And you're not a bit better off. It's like one man said as they went away
from church. His wife noticed something was wrong with him.

"What's the matter?" she said.

"I don't know," he said. "I'm disappointed and discouraged."

"With what?"

"With the church. With our pastor. He preached on faith this morning. He
quoted all those wonderful scriptures. 'All things are possible to him that
believeth.' 'What things soever you desire, when you pray, believe that ye
receive them, and you shall have them.' He told us what faith would do if we
had it. And he told us we ought to get it. But he didn't tell us how.

I'm just hanging out here in the air. I know I ought to get it. I know what it
would do if I had it. But I don't know how to get it."

The real truth about it is he had faith all the time.

Faith to be saved. If he had been taught correctly, he would have known he


could have fed that measure of faith on God's Word and it would grow. He
could use that same faith to receive healing for his body. He could use that
same faith to get answers to prayer. He could use that same faith to be filled
with the Holy Ghost. But he didn't know it.

You can't blame him, because what he heard hindered him more than it
helped him. It didn't feed him. It took out of him.

There was a glow about the face of an obviously refined lady when she came
up after the final service to shake hands with me. It was the first time she'd
come up during the three-week meeting but I'd watched her blossom and
open up.

She said, "Brother Hagin, thank you."

"For what?"

"For the Word. You've given me back my joy of salvation."


I said, "Praise the Lord."

She said, "I'm a visitor here. The last service I attended in my church, and I
can understand that the pastor was trying to get us to pray; but instead of
preaching it the right way to make us want to, he beat us over the head for
nearly an hour. When he got through I went to the altar, got on my knees, and
stuck my head under the altar. I said, 'Dear God, I don't know whether I'm
saved or not. I don't know whether I have anything or not. I don't know where
I am or who I am.' I stayed there and cried until about 1:30 in the afternoon.
But you've encouraged us to pray. And I believe I'm praying more than I ever
did in my life. I know I'm enjoying my fellowship with the Lord more than
ever. I know I've got back the joy that I had when I was first a newborn
babe."

One reason we haven't grown is we've preached to believers like they were
sinners. We've treated them like they were sinners, and fed them like they
were sinners, until we've undermined their faith.

We need to present God's blessings and God's power in such a way that folks
want to do it, and get so hungry they can't help but do it. If you have to force
people, it isn't going to work or be much of a blessing or benefit to them
anyhow.

I'm talking about things that defeat us.

Our ministry, maybe unconsciously, has fed the congregations a psychology


of unbelief. Instead of talking about what they have, they talk about what
they don't have.

They talk about politics. Where did Jesus ever say to go into all the world and
preach politics? He didn't.

Where did you ever read that Jesus said, "Go into all the world and give a
book review."? You didn't. He said, "Go into all the world and preach the
Gospel."

Unconsciously, our ministry has fed us on a psychology of unbelief.


Most of the songs we sing are not really scriptural.

(I'm talking about things that keep us from growing.) Most hymns put off
redemption until after death.

"We don't have much here;

Can't expect much here;

But we're going to have it after

awhile.

We're going to have to do the best

we can here;

And wander around like a begger

in this old gloomy world.

When we all get to heaven, it'll be

different."

It would be different now if you'd believe God!

Listen to the songs. Listen to the sermons.

They tell you we have the promise of eternal life—preaching to believers. We


don't have the promise of eternal life. The sinner does. We have it! Eternal
life isn't something you're going to have when you get to heaven. It's
something you have right now.

I JOHN 5:13

13 These things have I written unto you that believe on the name of the Son
of God; that ye may know that ye have eternal life....
Present tense. "Have."

The Bible says that we have passed from death, spiritual death, unto life (I
John 3:14). That Greek word for life here is "zoe." It's the same word that's
used in John 3:16, "...that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but
have everlasting life."

Jesus said, "The thief cometh not, but for to steal, and to kill, and to destroy: I
am come—(What did you come for, Jesus?)—I am come that they might
have life..."

That's why He came! That we might have zoe!

Life! Sometimes it's translated "life." Sometimes, "eternal life." And


sometimes, "everlasting life." But it's all the same.

He said, "...I am come that they might have zoe, and that they might have it
more abundantly" (John 10:10).

He said you can have this Life right now—and you can have an abundance of
it! That's why He came!

I listened to a radio preacher telling about how we have the promise of it, and
we're going to have it one of these days. No, if you don't have it in this life,
you'll never have it in the after life.

"For the wages of sin is death; but the gift of God is eternal life through Jesus
Christ our Lord" (Romans 6:23). It's a gift you receive now! You receive this
Life—this zoe, the life of God, the God-kind of Life—into your spirit, into
your inward being.

It changes your life! This Life is the nature of God.

It makes you a new creature and displaces that old nature you had on the
inside of you. So you become a new man in Christ Jesus, with a new nature,
"...old things are passed away; behold, all things are become new" (II
Corinthians 5:17).

But most of our hymns we sing put redemption and eternal life off until after
death. "We're going to have it then."

"We're going to have rest when we get to heaven."

Do you know what the Bible teaches? It teaches we can have rest and peace
right now. Jesus said:

MATTHEW 11:28-30

28 Come unto me, all ye that labour and are heavy laden, and I will give you
rest.

29 Take my yoke upon you, and learn of me; for I am meek and lowly in
heart: and ye shall find rest unto your souls.

30 For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light.

The way some people talk, I just wonder what they're yoked up with. It's
always a hard luck story.

Always going through a trial. Always having a hard time. Always scraping
the bottom of the barrel, or else under the barrel with the barrel on top. "Oh,
this heavy burden we have to bear. We're going to lay down our heavy
burdens one day."

Oh, no. You lay them down when you find Jesus.

"My yoke is easy, and my burden is light," He said. It's not hard. It's not
burdensome. It's not heavy.

What are they yoked up with? Unconsciously they've gotten yoked with
unbelief. Though they actually belong to Jesus and have been born-again,
they have gotten yoked up with unbelief and their burden became heavy
instead of light. They couldn't sleep. Couldn't eat. They felt like they had
butterflies in their stomach.

When there is rest in your soul, it will affect your body. It will affect your
entire being.
"We're going to have victory after while."

No, thank God, we have victory right now!

I JOHN 5:4

4 For whatsoever is born of God overcometh the world: and this is the victory
that overcometh the world, even our faith.

"We're going to be overcomers when we get to heaven"

No, we're overcomers now!

"If God be for us who can be against us?" (Romans 8:31). He's on our side.
We're victors now. We're overcomers now.

"We're going to have peace with God when we get to heaven."

That isn't what the Bible says. Romans 5:1 says, "Therefore being justified by
faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ." It's wonderful
to have that peace.

The Bible does say, "There is no peace, saith the Lord, unto the wicked"
(Isaiah 48:22). If I didn't have this peace I'd go to checking up on myself. But
He didn't say that to Christians. He said it to sinners.

When you preach to Christians like they were sinners you build that kind of
consciousness in them.

You hold them under condemnation. They can't grow.

It's impossible. It's the wrong diet. It isn't even the sincere milk of the Word.

Dr. John Alexander Dowie said, "Our songs are embalmed with unbelief."
That's kept us from growing. We've sung those songs so much we think
they're so. I don't want to bind you, but it would be better not to sing than to
sing a bunch of junk, a bunch of unbelief.

"There will be no more failing when we get to heaven. We have nothing on


this side and can't expect anything on this side except failure, misery,
disappointment, and weakness."

That isn't what the Word of God teaches. Paul said, "We're more than
conquerors." Not just conquerors.

More than conquerors!

"Yes, but Paul was an apostle," someone said.

Paul didn't say he was a conqueror because he was an apostle. He said, "...we
are more than conquerors through him that loved us" (Romans 8:37). Christ
didn't belong to Paul anymore than He does to us.

That doesn't mean you won't have any tests. That doesn't mean you won't
have any trials. That doesn't mean it's just going to fall on you like ripe
cherries off a tree. Or that you're going to float down the river of time on
flowery beds of ease.

It didn't with Paul. He got in jail. He got his back beat. He got his feet in
stocks. He was in the innermost prison with every reason in the world to
gripe and complain. But at midnight he and Silas prayed and sang praises to
God!

When he got on board that ship a prisoner he said, "Sirs, I perceive that this
voyage will be with hurt and much damage, not only of the lading and ship,
but also of our lives" (Acts 27:10). They didn't pay any attention to him.
Everything seemed to be all right. But before it was all over he was running
the thing. He started on the bottom, but wound up captain of the boat.

Don't stay on the bottom! You don't have to. Do you know what brought Paul
out? You can see it in his words.

When all hope that they should be saved was gone, old Paul stepped forth
right in the midst of it with the answer. He'd heard from heaven. (We have
God's Word and we've heard from heaven. It couldn't be anymore sure if an
angel came down from heaven and wrote it with his finger in a granite rock.
That couldn't be any more sure than God's written Word.) Old Paul said, "Sirs
. . . there stood by me this night the angel of God, whose I am, and whom I
serve, Saying, Fear not, Paul; thou must be brought before Caesar: and, lo,
God hath given thee all them that sail with thee. Wherefore, sirs, be of good
cheer: for I believe God, that it shall be even as it was told me"

(Acts 27:21-25).

I like that fellow Paul. He made three positive confessions: "I belong to God.
I serve God. I believe God." And that's what caused him to rise.

If he'd been like most folks, he would have been whipped right in the midst
of this crisis and he and the whole bunch would have gone down. For most
folks would have said, "I've been trying to serve Him all these many years.
The Lord knows I've been trying to serve Him. If He doesn't intervene
somehow, we're all going."

And they would have gone. I'm not making fun. I'm just stating facts. That's
what defeats us.

Paul didn't say, "I'm trying to serve Him." He said, "I am serving Him . . .
The God whose I am ... I belong to Him."

Someone said, "I hope I do."

Thank God, I know I do. I belong to Him. I serve Him. I believe Him.

PART IV

Chapter 8

WHAT MANNER OF MAN ARE YOU?

"Give none offence, neither to the Jews, nor to the Gentiles, nor to the church
of God."

—I Corinthians 10:32

Here we have God's ethnic division of the human race: Jew, Gentile, Church
of God. The Jew is ever a Jew. Gentile means the heathen world. Everyone
outside of Christ who is not a Jew is a heathen, or a Gentile. The Church, the
body of Christ, the new creation stands utterly alone.

Paul has another division in his writings: the natural man, the carnal man, and
the spiritual man.

The natural man is one who has never yet passed out of death into life. He
has never been born-again.

He's never been recreated. He's never become a new creature in Christ Jesus.

The carnal man is a new creature. He has been born-again. But he's never
developed or grown. It is sad but true that the carnal man may remain in this
condition all his life long. He may never develop beyond the babyhood state
of the new creation. He is governed by his body; by his physical senses,
rather than by his spirit.

The spiritual man is one who has developed in divine things. His spirit has
gained the ascendancy over his intellectual processes. And his spirit has
gained the ascendancy over his body and his physical senses. God governs
him through the Word.

Let's look carefully at these three men to see which one we are, and what we
can do about it.

Chapter 9

THE NATURAL MAN

"But the natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God: for they
are foolishness unto him: neither can he know them, because they are
spiritually discerned."

—I Corinthians 2:14

Another translation says, "because they are spiritually understood." If you


understood the things of God and spiritual things with your mind, the natural
man could understand them. But you don't. You discern them, or understand
them, with your spirit.

The natural man is the unspiritual physical man.

His wisdom is earthly; earthly means natural. James describes it:

JAMES 3:14-15

14 But if ye have bitter envying and strife in your hearts, glory not, and lie
not against the truth.

15 This wisdom descendeth not from above, but is earthly, sensual, devilish
(demonic).

The natural man is motivated by demons. He is ruled by Satan. Oh no, I'm


not saying he is demon possessed. You see, all those who have never been
born-again have Satan as their god and father. They are in the kingdom of
darkness and they are more or less ruled by Satan and demons. Remember
Ephesians 6:12 says, "rulers of the darkness of this world." So, the natural
man is a Satan-ruled man.

ROMANS 8:7-9

7 Because the carnal mind (other translations call it "the mind of the flesh") is
enmity against God: for it is not subject to the law of God, neither indeed can
be.

8 So then they that are in the flesh cannot please God. (This natural man
cannot please God.) 9 But ye are not in the flesh, but in the Spirit, if so be
that the Spirit of God dwell in you.

The natural man is the man that is motivated by the flesh; a physical man, not
a spiritual man.

(I found out years ago it helped me in my studies in Romans, every place it


says "flesh" to substitute the word "senses" or "physical senses." After all, the
only way the flesh has any expression is through its physical senses. It will
clear up a lot of thinking for you if you will do this.)
Knowledge Contrasted: Revelation—Natural Human

The natural man receives not the things of the Spirit of God for he cannot
know them. You see, all the knowledge the natural man has is received
through his five senses: sight, hearing, taste, smell, and touch.

His mind is actually governed by his senses. I call this natural human
knowledge. Others call it sense knowledge. That's a good term. The way it
comes is through the five senses. Sense knowledge, natural human
knowledge, is all that the natural man possesses.

But born-again believers have a knowledge that is above the flesh, above the
senses. It could rightly be called revelation knowledge. This knowledge is
revealed to us in the Word of God. It's above the natural. The Bible brings
you a revelation, or reveals knowledge to you, which your physical senses
couldn't grasp. You couldn't understand it even after revelation comes. But
thank God, it's there.

It is deeply important that every believer notice the contrast between natural
human knowledge, or sense knowledge, and revelation knowledge.

Many modern theologians are not revelation knowledge men, but sense
knowledge men. It's all in their minds. Most of the leaders of the church
world as a whole are actually sense knowledge men. If they are saved, they
are not spiritually developed. Many aren't even saved, but just natural men.
They are governed by their physical senses. That leads them to repudiate
revelation knowledge, or to give it second place in their lives.

The natural man cannot understand "the things of the Spirit of God." They are
foolishness to him. The Bible is of the Spirit of God. It is not natural human
knowledge. Holy men of old wrote as they were moved by the Spirit of God.

"Brother Hagin, this is refreshing," someone said.

"I am going to school and my professor said concerning the Bible, 'If you
can't understand it and reason it out, forget it.' "
Can you understand and reason out God? Well then, forget Him, according to
this professor's (?) advice. Can you understand and reason out with your little
peanut brain Jesus, the Son of God? The virgin birth? (This professor had
said, "The virgin birth is not reasonable. It didn't happen.") Can you
understand and reason out the Holy Spirit? Can you understand and reason
out divine healing? Can you understand and reason out the supernatural? No!

"Well then," he is saying, "if it doesn't make sense, forget it." This just proves
what I am saying. He was motivated by the senses.

You can always locate these people. "Now common sense will tell you...." I
know, but where did you ever read in the Bible that we walk by common
sense? You didn't. It says that we walk by faith and not by sight (II
Corinthians 5:7). It says, "...as many as are led by the Spirit of God, they are
the sons of God"

(Romans 8:14).

Natural man cannot understand the Bible because it is of the Spirit of God. It
is in a realm he doesn't know anything about. Someone said, "What you're
not up on, you're down on." The reason a lot of folks are down on a lot of
things is, they're not up on them. If a man is a natural man and hasn't been
born-again, he's not up on spiritual things. He doesn't know anything about
them, so he is down on them.

The Natural Walk

EPHESIANS 2:1-3

1 And you hath he quickened, who were dead in trespasses and sins;

2 Wherein in time past ye walked according to the course of this world,


according to the prince of the power of the air, the spirit that now worketh in
the children of disobedience:

3 Among whom also we all had our conversation in times past in the lusts of
our flesh, fulfilling the desires of the flesh and of the mind; and were by
nature the children of wrath, even as others.
Here is a picture of the natural man walking. He is walking "according to the
course of this world." He is walking according to the "prince of the power of
the air." That's the devil. He is being ruled by the "spirit that now worketh in
the children (sons) of disobedience." He is doing the "desires of the flesh" or
of the senses. He is "by nature the child of wrath."

That's strong language. But it describes the man outside of Christ. Notice
verses 11 and 12 of this same chapter.

EPHESIANS 2:11-12

11 Wherefore remember, that ye being in time past Gentiles in the flesh, who
are called uncircumcision by that which is called the Circumcision in the
flesh made by hands;

12 That at that time ye were without Christ, being aliens from the
commonwealth of Israel, and strangers from the covenants of promise,
having no hope, and without God in the world: The American Revised
Version of verse 12 reads, "that ye were at that time separate from Christ,
alienated from the commonwealth of Israel, and strangers from the covenants
of the promise, having no hope and without God in the world."

That was us before we were saved. And that's a picture of everybody who is
not now saved. The Gentile has no more claim or hold on God today than he
did then. As a Gentile he has no legal standing, no legal rights. But thank
God, he can come and be born-again, and become a member of the body of
Christ; then he has a standing and he has rights.

I CORINTHIANS 1:28

28 And base things of the world, and things which are despised, hath God
chosen, yea, and things which are not, to bring to nought things that are:

Here the Word of God is talking about us when He chose us in Christ. He


calls us the "base things of the world." He calls us the "things which are
despised."

And, "things which are not."


The Centinary translation reveals the "things which are not" represented the
slaves of the Roman Empire.

They had no standing, no voice. They were just things, so to speak, which
were not. But when they became Christians, they had a standing before God.

I Peter 2:10 says, "Which in time past were not a people, but are now the
people of God:...." The Gentile has no standing. He is a "no people." With all
his boasted culture, ability, and money, he has no voice; no standing with
God. The picture of utter spiritual bondage, Ephesians 2:11 describes him as
without hope, hopeless; and without God, Godless. Hopeless and Godless.

EPHESIANS 4:17-18

17 This I say therefore, and testify in the Lord, that ye henceforth walk not as
other Gentiles walk, in the vanity of their mind,

18 Having the understanding darkened, being alienated from the life of God
through the ignorance that is in them, because of the blindness of their
heart: They walk in the vanity of sense knowledge. They walk in the vanity
of their minds. They are darkened in their understanding. They are alienated
from the life of God. They are filled with their own knowledge; ignorant of
spiritual things.

Isn't that a picture of them?

But thank God there is a way. There's a way out.

There's a way to God. Jesus said, "I am the way. I am the truth. I am the life."

Chapter 10

THE CARNAL MAN

"And I, brethren, could not speak unto you as unto spiritual, but as unto
carnal, even as unto babes in Christ.

I have fed you with milk, and not with meat: for hitherto ye were not able to
bear it, neither yet now are ye able.

For ye are yet carnal: for whereas there is among you envying, and strife,
and divisions, are ye not carnal, and walk as men? "

—I Corinthians 3:1-3

Who is this carnal man? He is the babe in Christ.

Not a newborn babe—when Paul wrote these Corinthians they were not
newborn people. He plainly infers they should have been beyond where they
were in their spiritual development. They seem to have been in about the
same boat as the Hebrew Christians (Hebrews 5:12).

Paul's letter to the Corinthians is written to born-again, Spirit-filled believers


—even to a church which has all the gifts of the Spirit operating in it. He said
to them, "ye come behind in no gift," bragging on them a little first before he
started to correct them (I Corinthians 1:7). He specifically mentioned that
they didn't come behind in utterance—that means the utterance gifts (I
Corinthians 1:5). You can see that when you get over to where he began to
correct them.

They were all trying to talk in tongues at once.

Here is a thought that will help us in some of our thinking so we can grow.
Spiritual gifts don't make you a full grown Christian. Often folks don't know
what spirituality is. Some think being spiritual would be exercising a spiritual
gift. That couldn't be so because here it plainly states these Corinthians were
carnal and babes—and they had all the gifts of the Spirit operating in their
church.

I've heard people say when a fellow Christian they thought to be carnal gave
an utterance in tongues, or an interpretation, or prophecy, "That couldn't be
the Lord."

I said, "Why?"

They'd say, "Well because they're carnal."


I said, "Do you mean to infer that carnal Christians can't have the Holy
Ghost?"

"Yes."

"That can't be so because you have Him. And the church at Corinth had
Him."

Can carnal Christians have the Holy Ghost?

Certainly!

"Are carnal Christians saved?" someone asked this question to one of our Full
Gospel magazines some years ago. I thought it was sort of cute the way it
was answered: "Paul seemed to think so." Then they gave this scripture.

Actually the Greek word translated "carnal" has created much comment and
no little confusion among Bible scholars. I think only in latter years has the
Spirit of God made this word clear to us. In some scriptures it is translated
"carnal" and in others it is translated

"fleshly." It really means a man who is governed by his physical senses. That
would be the flesh governing him. Though he is born-again and a new
creature, he walks after the order of natural men.

Walks as a "Mere Man"

Listen again to what Paul wrote, "And I, brethren, could not speak unto you
as unto spiritual (men), but as unto carnal (men), even as unto babes in
Christ...For ye are yet carnal: for whereas there is among you envying, and
strife, and divisions, are ye not carnal, (NOW GET THIS) and walk as men?"
Several modern translations read, "and walk as mere men?"

Paul talks about envy and some of the same things James did in talking about
the natural man who had never been born-again. Paul is saying in
effect, "Though you have been born-again, you are still walking as a mere
man, as a common man, as the natural man who has never been born-again.
You are walking just like the world men walk. There is envy and strife
among them. You are letting your flesh dominate you."

One modern translation instead of saying "ye are carnal" says "you are body-
ruled." That's a good translation. The outward man—the body which is not
redeemed yet (thank God we will have a new body one day)—rules, instead
of the inward man who is a new man in Christ and has the Holy Ghost
dwelling in him dominating and ruling. Too much of the time in Christians
the outward man dominates the inward. As long as he does, they will remain
babies and carnal.

They will walk just like world men—those outside of Christ—walk.

You'll run into these baby Christians who have never grown sometimes, and
it is amazing to see how they think they are so spiritual yet they live in the
flesh or in the senses.

I preached to a church once who before they received the baptism of the Holy
Ghost and became Full Gospel were what we call old line holiness. Some of
them almost thought it was a sin to take a bath. One did tell me it was a sin to
use deodorant. Another one thought it was a sin to drink cokes.

It wasn't a little church. There were over 500 there the Sunday morning I
preached and the Lord anointed me and gave me a message just for them. I
never preached it afterwards. And although I was quite dignified then, much
more than I am now, I jumped off the platform and ran up and down the
aisles. I said, "People talk about worldliness. This is the most worldly church
I ever preached in."

Man, they looked at me.

Then I began to tell them what worldliness and carnality is. I read what Paul
had to say about the Corinthians, that there was envy and jealousy, debate,
strife, and division. I said, "Personally, I thought Paul was writing a letter to
this church, then I happened to look up there and it said Corinthians."

Some of them got so angry they were ready to fight. (That proved they were
carnal, didn't it?) But it helped some of them.
Carnal Christians have not learned the love law nor the love walk. When you
love one another you won't walk in envy and strife and jealousy and division.
The Corinthians were born-again, filled with the Holy Ghost, they had gifts
of the Spirit; yet they had not learned the love law, nor the love walk. When
you are spiritual you learn that. When we begin walking in divine love,
Christian love, Bible love, the God-kind of love, we stop being jealous; we
stop strife and division and backbiting.

Backbiting, bitterness, and jealousy are signs of underdevelopment on the


part of the believer. What causes these things? It's because people are selfish.
As long as you are selfish, sensitive, and can be hurt, you are a babe in Christ
and cannot grow.

Growing Out of Carnality

God wants us to grow. There is no other way to get out of the carnal state
except to grow out of it. Peter said, "Desire the sincere milk of the Word that
you may grow thereby." Paul said, "I have fed you with milk." Paul is trying
to get these Corinthians to growing. He didn't tell them they weren't saved.
That comes as a shock to some folks, but they'll just have to be shocked.

At the end of the chapter he said to them, "Therefore let no man glory in men.
For all things are yours; Whether Paul, or Apollos, or Cephas, or the world,
or life, or death, or things present, or things to come; all are yours; And ye are
Christ's; and Christ is God's" (I Corinthians 3:21-23).

I am so glad for the Holy Spirit and for the Word of God. I am so glad the
Lord has been patient with all of us and helps us.

I can remember praying away back in 1951 at the beginning of March down
in the state of Alabama where I was holding a meeting. I was praying in
tongues, in the spirit (I Corinthians 14:14).

(The devil and natural people—and sometimes even some carnal people—
don't like this. But it'll help you, praise God. Most of what I know about the
Bible, I learned by praying in tongues. What do I mean by that? The Spirit is
to be your Teacher. If you will take enough time to pray in tongues, you'll get
your mind and body quiet while your spirit is functioning. You are speaking
out of your spirit. Then God can communicate with your spirit because it
becomes sensitive to Him, for He is a Spirit.)

I prayed in tongues for almost 3 hours that day. Yet it seemed like only about
15 minutes. When I looked at my watch I couldn't believe it had gone by so
fast. I had my eyes shut all that time praying.

During that time of praying the Lord took me through the first three chapters
of I Corinthians—and it changed me. It changed the course of my ministry. It
changed the course of my life. It made me a greater blessing to the Church. It
enabled me to do more than I'd ever done before. It helped me to do some
growing.

He took me through the first chapter where Paul bragged on them a little and
then began to tell them how they were babes and carnal.

He said to me, "If it had been you and some preachers you know writing to
those people, you would have said, 'You backslidden buzzards need to pray
through and get right with God.'"

That's probably exactly what I would have said up until then.

He said, "But Paul didn't call them buzzards. Paul didn't call them
backslidden. He did call them carnal, and he did call them babes. When a
baby cries, hitting him over the head isn't going to make him grow.

Feeding him. Putting something into him, not taking something out of him,
makes him grow. Don't take anything out of them. Put something into them.

"Do you remember J.W.?" He asked me.

I didn't.

"Do you remember Tuffy?" He said.

That was what we called him, Tuffy. Boy, that was putting it mildly. Tuffy
wasn't a strong enough word for him. But even when He said that I still didn't
remember because it had been so many years.
Then He called his whole name to me. And when He gave me his last name I
said, "Oh yes, I remember."

The Lord refreshed my memory that day and it has enabled me to help others.

Tuffy's mother died when he was very young. His daddy was a motorman on
the old interurban line from Waco to Denison, Texas and wasn't home much.
So Tuffy was left to himself. He ran up and down the back alleys and got into
the wrong crowd.

He was still in the 5th grade when I was, but he should have been in the 8th.
And he was making a straight "D" report card—"D" was the lowest grade
they gave in those days. He had been in trouble and I overheard the principal
telling my Grandpa about it.

He asked, "What are we going to do with Tuffy?

The judge called me again and he wants to send him to reform school. He's
just been lenient on him because he knew he didn't have a mother."

I heard my Grandpa say, "Mr. Mac, if you'll do as I tell you, we'll make a
man out of him. We'll make a useful citizen out of him."

The principal said, "Well, the judge is leaving it up to me for another thirty
days."

Grandpa said, "Tell him to give us ninety days."

The principal agreed to call and ask for ninety days.

"Did you notice how he hangs around me?"

Grandpa asked. "He's gotten to where he stays with me nearly all the time."

"Yes, I've noticed that," Mr. Mac said.

"It's because I'm the only one who puts anything into him. I tell him I've got
confidence in him. I tell him I believe in him. Everybody else tells him he's
no good. Everybody else tells him 'You're going to reform school.'
Everybody else tells him he'll never make it.

He's gotten where he won't even play on the playground anymore. He just
hangs around with me.

Now, in the first place, don't whip him anymore."

Mr. Mac would whip him one to three times a day, every single day.
Sometimes folks do need whipping you understand, but other times it doesn't
mean a thing in the world. You could hear the paddle all over that floor of the
school, yet Tuffy would come back into the room laughing.

Grandpa told the principal, "I hid in the restroom in your office to watch and
he's the one who stole the money out of your desk drawer."

They sold candy at lunch period and used the proceeds to buy playground
equipment. Someone had stolen the money. Grandpa hid to see who got it.
And it was Tuffy.

He said, "You have to start building confidence in him. So take him out of
study periods and tell him, 'J.W., I need someone older than the rest to watch
the office. Someone has been stealing the money.' Point right to where the
money is and show him. If a dime is ever missing I'll put it back myself."

After they had this conversation at noon we went back to class. The first
study period Mr. Mac came to the door and called Tuffy out. Everybody
snickered.

They knew he was going to get a whipping. They kept listening to hear that
paddle. But he didn't come back.

They wondered. But I knew exactly what was happening.

Mr. Mac had said to him. "Now J.W., you keep the office. We need someone
older over here." He pulled the drawer open and showed him the money.
"Here it is and someone has been stealing it." Of course, it was him.

The Lord reminded me how almost immediately I saw him begin to make
passing grades. In fact, he did so well they began to move him up. He never
went to reform school. He never went to the penitentiary. He grew up to be a
useful citizen.

That day the Lord took me through the babyhood, childhood, and manhood
stages of spiritual growth.

He told me, "Spiritual growth is like natural growth in a sense. Paul didn't
just take out of these people. He corrected them gently all right, and showed
them where they were missing it. But he didn't take everything away from
them. He bragged about what they did have. And showed them there was
more out there—encouraging them, 'Go to it! Get after it! It's your's!'

"Don't beat Christians over the head," He said.

Don't beat anyone over the head. Feed them. Find somewhere you can hook
on with them. Don't fight other churches and other believers.

"Don't take anything away from anybody," He said.

"Give them something. Put something into them."

That day changed my ministry. I started doing what the Lord said, and it
worked.

Let's look again at what Paul said to them in the last part of that third chapter,
"Therefore let no man glory in men. For all things are yours...."

Do you mean to tell me, Paul, that these baby Christians, these carnal
Christians who were walking as mere men, that all things were theirs?

Yes. It all belonged to them. They may not have come to a knowledge of it
yet, but it belonged to them.

They may not have grown to a place where they could appreciate it and take
advantage of it yet, but it belonged to them.

"...Whether Paul, or Apollos, or Cephas, or the world, or life, or death, or


things present, or things to come; all are yours; (He didn't take anything from
them. He said, 'It's all yours!') And ye are Christ's; and Christ is God's" (I
Corinthians 3:21-23).

Chapter 11

THE SPIRITUAL MAN

"And I, brethren, could not speak unto you as unto spiritual...."

—I Corinthians 3:1

In other words Paul said, "I couldn't speak unto you as unto spiritual men."
Isn't that a sad tragedy?

Who is this spiritual man? What are his characteristics?

EPHESIANS 1:3

3 Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who hath blessed
us with all spiritual blessings in heavenly places in Christ:

The spiritual man is one who knows what belongs to him in Christ Jesus, and
takes advantage of it.

The spiritual man has drunk deeply at the fountain.

He has fed regularly at the table of the Lord.

The spiritual man has saturated himself in love, the love of God.

Knowing the Father

This man has come to know the Father in reality.

There was a time in my life that I knew the Lord Jesus, was filled with the
Holy Ghost, had preached a number of years, and had various gifts of the
Spirit operating at times in my life—but somehow, on the inside of me, I
knew that God could become more real to me as my Father than a father in
the flesh. The Word said He was my Father. And I knew in my spirit He
could become more real to me than my wife, more real to me than either of
my children. I knew in my heart—and I said it out loud as I drove down the
highway on the way to revival meetings—that I knew God could become
more real to me than the automobile I drove. But—I knew He wasn't that real
to me.

It did not come overnight. It did not come in one month. It did not come in
one year. But as I continued to do what the Bible said—to fellowship with the
Father through the Word and through prayer—little by little, He became
more and more real to me.

Until one day I was able to say, "He is more real to me and I know Him better
than I know my wife. I'm more personally acquainted with God my Father
than I am my wife. He is more real to me than my children.

He is more real to me than the automobile I drive." (To be honest about it, not
too many can say that, because natural things are more real to them than
spiritual things.) I came to the place that every waking moment, even when
I'd wake up in the nighttime, I'd be conscious of His presence—more
conscious of His presence than I was of my wife's.

Knowing the Son

The spiritual man comes to know the Lord Jesus Christ in His great ministry
at the right hand of God the Father. Every born-again believer knows the
Lord Jesus Christ as Savior. But just being born-again will not cause you to
grow. Just to know Him as Savior, you'll never be more than a baby. To
grow, the believer must come to know what he is in Christ, and what Christ is
in him. He must come to know the present day ministry of the Lord Jesus
Christ at the right hand of the Father.

Knowing the reality of Jesus' present day ministry did more for me in my
spiritual growth than anything else. We need to grow up in knowing the
reality of His ministry today as High Priest (Hebrews 4:14-16), as Advocate
(I John 2:1), as Intercessor (Romans 8:34, Hebrews 7:25), as Shepherd
(Psalm 23:1, John 10:14), as Lord!

Just because we've heard this taught is no sign we walk in the reality of it. It
is as we feed upon it and become acquainted with the truth that we come into
the full knowledge of the Son of God unto a perfect (mature) man.

Knowing the Holy Ghost

The spiritual man has come to know the blessed intimacy of the Holy Spirit
as He is unveiled in the Word. You can be baptized with the Holy Ghost and
speak in other tongues and never know this.

That's the sad thing about it. The baptism of the Holy Ghost has been
preached in a way that isn't exactly right. And folks think that because "I
have the baptism of the Holy Ghost" that's the end. But it isn't.

It's just the beginning. And because of wrong thinking they never really learn
to know the Holy Spirit intimately and are cut off from growing.

As spiritual babes they received the infilling of the Holy Spirit and spoke
with other tongues, and were all

"taken up" with the outward manifestation. Certainly I believe in speaking in


other tongues. Thank God for it.

But you hear them talking about how "I felt," and they're trying to "feel" that
way again.

(It doesn't make the least bit of difference to me if I ever "feel" that way
again. I base nothing on feelings. I base everything on the Word.)

Then when they lose that "feeling" they thought they had, they think He's
gone. But He isn't. Jesus said, "I will pray the Father, and he shall give you
another Comforter, that he may abide with you for ever;" (John 14:16). He
didn't say He would stay two weeks. He didn't say He would come on a
vacation. He said the Holy Ghost would come "that he may abide with you
forever."

Somebody said, "But Brother Hagin, don't you believe that if a man sins the
Holy Ghost leaves him?"

Certainly not. If He ever left him he would be forever doomed and damned.
He could never get back to God. The Holy Ghost doesn't go and come. Not a
scripture in the Bible says so. David, after he'd had the woman's husband
killed and committed adultery with her, in his prayer of repentance said,
"Take not thy holy spirit from me" (Psalm 51:11). Had the Holy Spirit left
him, he could never get repentance. He could never pray. He could never
come back.

And if He ever left you, that would be the end of it, too. He's still there to
show you the way back to repentance. If you've sinned and failed He is still
there—because He's a representative of God—to show you the way out and
lead you back.

I've found that when I've missed God and sinned it isn't the Holy Ghost inside
me who condemns me, it's my own spirit. Jesus said that He hadn't come into
the world to condemn the world, but that the world through Him might be
saved (John 3:17).

I found that the Holy Ghost was there to take the Word of God and open it up
to me, to show me the ministry of Jesus for me today. Gently. Even when I'd
missed it and was so ashamed of it I hated it with every fiber of my being, yet
He was so sweet and so gentle to lead me, to show me the way out and the
way back.

...as Indweller

I JOHN 4:4

4 Ye are of God, little children, and have overcome them: because greater is
he that is in you, than he that is in the world.

We need to become conscious of the Holy Spirit's indwelling presence, and


learn to walk in the light of the Word on this subject. Then in time of crisis
we would remain calm and collected because we'd know the Bible is so
whether or not it "seems like" it is.

If you know "greater is he that is in me, than he that is in the world," when
crisis comes, you won't have to run around like a chicken with his head cut
off, flopping here and there trying to find help. You'll know Help is available.
You'll know He is in there; the Greater One is in there. You're walking in
intimate fellowship with Him, and He'll show you what to do.

In every crisis of life He shows me exactly what to do. On the inside of me,
He'll rise up in me to give illumination to my mind, direction to my spirit. But
He cannot do it if you're not sufficiently acquainted with Him to recognize it.

If you've been born-again and filled with the Holy Ghost, you have on the
inside of you all you'll ever need to put you over. Jesus said, "I will pray the
Father, and he shall give you another Comforter" (John 14:16). The Greek
word translated Comforter also means—and the Amplified translation reads
this way—Counselor, Helper, Intercessor, Advocate, Strengthener, and
Standby. What else would you ever need?

Get acquainted with the Holy Ghost through the Word. When you know what
the Word says about Him, then you'll know what He'll do. You'll know how
He will manifest Himself, and you'll know how to yield to Him. You'll know
how to walk with Him. And you can grow spiritually.

...as Teacher

Here is an invitation, a precious invitation, a blessed invitation of the Spirit to


go into the deep things of God:

I CORINTHIANS 2:12

12 Now we have received, not the spirit of the world, but the spirit which is
of God; that we might know the things that are freely given to us of God.

We didn't receive the spirit of the world—we received the Holy Spirit, the
Spirit which is of God.

Why? For what purpose? That we might know something.

Jesus said of Him, "He will teach you. He will guide you into all truth. He
will show you things to come. He will receive of mine and show it unto you."

The "things that are freely given to us" are the things Paul's talking about in
Ephesians 1:3, "all spiritual blessings in heavenly places in Christ." And they
are the things:

I CORINTHIANS 2:13

13 Which things also we speak, not in the words which man's wisdom
teacheth, but which the Holy Ghost teacheth; comparing spiritual things with
spiritual.

Now notice something Paul said earlier in this chapter, "Howbeit we speak
wisdom among them that are perfect (mature—baby Christians wouldn't get
it): yet not the wisdom of this world, nor of the princes of this world, that
come to nought:" (verse 13). Another translation reads, "nor of the dethroned
powers of this world." That's involved in the all things He has done for us.

Jesus—in His death, burial, and resurrection—dethroned the devil and all the
spiritual forces that had ruled this earth from the time Adam sold out to him
in the garden. Adam was the god of this world. God gave him dominion over
all the work of His hand. But Adam committed high treason and sold out to
the devil. Then the devil became the god of this world (II Corinthians 4:4).

Ephesians 6:12 says, “For we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against
principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this world,
against spiritual wickedness in high places.” Jesus dethroned them! In His
great plan of redemption which God planned and sent Jesus to consummate,
these powers are dethroned. They can't rule over us any more, but we can rule
over them in the name of Jesus.

Now—this wisdom is "not in the words which man's wisdom teacheth, but
which the Holy Ghost teacheth;" (I Corinthians 2:13). It is an unveiling of
spiritual things. You couldn't have knowledge from the natural, to save your
life, that Jesus defeated the devil.

You couldn't see Him do it. The disciples saw Him dying at Calvary, but they
didn't know why He died.

He was with them and had tried to tell them. But they didn't know why He
died when He died. After He appeared to them they said, "Lord wilt thou at
this time restore again the kingdom to Israel?" It wasn't until the Holy Ghost
came and began to teach them, that they understood the plan of salvation and
what God did for them in redemption. This couldn't be seen with the natural
eye. The natural man couldn't understand it at all. It is an unveiling of
spiritual things by the aid and the energy of the Spirit of God Himself.

His Inheritance

The spiritual man knows his inheritance.

COLOSSIANS 1:12-14

12 Giving thanks unto the Father, which hath made us meet to be partakers of
the inheritance of the saints in light:

13 Who hath delivered us from the power of darkness, and hath translated us
into the kingdom of his dear Son:

14 In whom we have redemption through his blood, even the forgiveness of


sins:

Another translation reads, "Giving thanks unto the Father, who has given us
the ability...." If He "made us meet," He gave us the ability. To do what? To
enjoy our share of the inheritance of the saints in light!

The spiritual man will know what his inheritance is in the light—for the light
of God's Word will shine in and open it to him. He'll know he has the Ability
to enjoy it.

His Ability

For God has given us our Ability. He is our Ability. That Ability reveals
itself in unveiling the treasures of the grace of God that belong to us.

Our thinking has been so shallow in some areas we have been robbed of
God's blessings. For instance, we have quoted Acts 1:8, "But ye shall receive
power, after that the Holy Ghost is come upon you: and ye shall be witnesses
unto me both in Jerusalem, and in all Judaea, and in Samaria, and unto the
uttermost part of the earth," and without studying it any we've put emphasis
on the word "power" not realizing what the word "power" means here.
I was pastor of a community church when I received the baptism of the Holy
Ghost and spoke with other tongues. To hear Full Gospel people talk about
this "power" I thought it would be some kind of a great overwhelming
physical and emotional experience. But all I did was talk in tongues. (Yet
when I read down through the Acts of the Apostles that was all I could find
they did. So if the other would have been important, the Bible would have
said something about it.) And though I talked in tongues for an hour and a
half and sang three songs in tongues—as I talked in tongues I said in my
mind, "My, my, my, I've had a greater blessing than this many times just out
praying by myself."

But, you see, receiving the Holy Ghost isn't getting a blessing. You can get
blessings beforehand and you can get blessings afterwards. It is receiving a
Divine Personality to come into you and dwell in your spirit!

I didn't know that. I'd shake myself, and feel myself, and think, "My, my, my,
I don't have any more power now than I ever had."

So I went back to my church and never said a word about it. I didn't seem to
have any more power to preach, but the congregation began to tell it.

They said, "You have something you didn't have."

I said, "What is it?"

"Well, it's a greater ability than you had. It's a greater punch."

I looked up this word "power" from Acts 1:8 in Young's Concordance. And I
found out that this Greek word translated "power" here also means "ability."

My congregation could see I had more ability to preach than I did have. I had
my mind hung up on the "power." God said that we would receive an ability.

An ability to witness. We've overlooked the ability trying to find the power.

John called it an unction, he called it an anointing, he said it is in you. When


you know the Ability of God is in there then you know what he meant when
he said, "Greater is he that is in you."
When you know this, then when you hit that hard place, you can just lean
back on Him instead of fighting and trying to pray the power down or work it
up. You can just lean back and laugh. You can shout all the way through
because you know the Greater One is in there. He'll put you over. He'll make
you a success. He'll bring you out.

The spiritual man is going to come to know this, but the baby doesn't know
this. The baby knows he has had an experience.

God has made us meet, He has given us the Ability.

That ability comes with the infilling of the Holy Ghost. Yes, the ability to
witness. But it doesn't stop there. He has given us the ability to enjoy our
inheritance.

Deliverance, redemption, is our inheritance (Colossians 1:13-14). We have


been delivered out of Satan's authority. Satan has no authority over you, or
over me, or over the Church. Let's don't let him take any. We have been
delivered out of his power or authority and translated into the kingdom of His
dear Son (verse 13).

Governed by the Word

You're in the place of His protection and His care.

You're in the place where you feed upon the bread of heaven. The Word of
God is the bread. Jesus said, "Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every
word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God." The manna of heaven is the
Word of God. As you feed on this Word, you will grow up spiritually into the
image and unto the stature of the Son of God.

And that's the only way you'll ever get there. As important as prayer is, you
won't get there by praying.

Though fasting may have a place, you won't get there by fasting. Though
self-denial may have a place in the Christian life, you won't get there by self-
denial.
Though experience has a place in the Christian life—and thank God for
experiences—but though you may have had many wonderful experiences or
many wonderful visions or revelations, they will not get you there. Nor will
spiritual gifts get you there. These things have their place and their purpose,
but the Bible tells you exactly how to get there. It comes by the knowledge of
the Word.

The spiritual man is the one in whom the Word has gained the ascendancy
over his mind and over his body. It has brought him into harmony with the
will of God, for the Word of God is the will of God.

PART V

Chapter 12

THE RIGHT DIET

You have to have the right diet if you're going to grow.

What is it?

Well, of course, the entire Word of God. But particularly the New Testament.
Because we live under the New Covenant, not under the Old Covenant.

Some things said back there don't apply to us. Many principles do, but other
things don't. They apply to the Jews.

Certain sections of the New Testament are written especially for your benefit.
(Other sections, like the four Gospels, are for the benefit of not just Christians
and believers, but the world and sinners.) There are Letters which are written
directly to the Church. Spend most of your time feeding on the Epistles.

No one told me to do it, but I believe that on the bed of affliction where I was
born-again as a boy of 15, I unconsciously yielded and was led by the Spirit
of God. The first time I was physically able to have a Bible brought to my
bed, when I looked at it and saw it said "Old Testament" and "New
Testament" I reasoned that the New must take the place of the Old. So I
started in with Matthew.
I eventually saw that the Letters were written to the Church—from Paul's
writings to the Romans and the Corinthians right on down through the Letters
of Peter and John. Through these many years I've spent 90% of my study of
the Word of God here. It's the diet I'm supposed to have. It's the message that
was written to me. There are things there which can't be found any place else.
Paul plainly stated about the mystery of this revelation that it was "now"
made manifest (Romans 16:25-26).

Let your diet be mainly made up of the Epistles or Letters which were written
to the Church. Particularly let it consist of I Corinthians 13 and the First
Epistle of John.

Get an Amplified translation of I Corinthians 13

and go over it carefully. It will do just what its name implies—it will amplify
those verses and help you understand them even better.

Feed on all five chapters of I John.

You will find that in these two writings—I Corinthians 13 and I John—the
great love teachings are unveiled and revealed. John comes back to it again
and again:

"We know that we have passed from death unto life, because we love the
brethren" (I John 3:14).

"But whoso hath this world's good, and seeth his brother have need, and
shutteth up his bowels of compassion from him, how dwelleth the love of
God in him?" (I John 3:17).

"But whoso keepeth his word, in him verily is the love of God perfected:...."
(I John 2:5).

"There is no fear in love; but perfect love casteth out fear...He that feareth is
not made perfect in love" (I John 4:18).

These are just a few of the many such statements there.


God's nature is Love. As His child you have the Love nature in you. Yet that
nature has to be fed in order for it to grow. Unless you feed where this is
found it will not grow and develop in your life.

I am thoroughly convinced that if every Christian would get into I


Corinthians 13 and I John and live there awhile, it would only be a little
while until they'd be so different they'd have to pinch themselves and say, "Is
this me?"

It wouldn't be long until their homes would be so different it would be


absolutely amazing. For one statement in I Corinthians 13 is, "(Love) seeketh
not her own" (verse 5). The babes are always seeking their own—naturally
and spiritually, too. The baby is always saying, "Mother, Johnny has my
cart." Or, "Mary has my doll." Strife. Quarreling over their own.

The quarrels in our homes, the divorces, give us a picture of the babyhood
state of the modern church.

Those who walk in love and have matured in love wouldn't be acting this
way. This babyhood condition in the church can be remedied only by the
study, the feeding upon, and the putting into practice of the Word of God.

Study the plan of redemption. Find out what you are in Christ—and what
Christ is in you. Find out your standing before God. Find out that you are the
righteousness of God in Christ Jesus. Find out what He did for you in His
death, burial, resurrection, ascension, and seating at the right hand of the
Father.

Find out what He is doing for you right now at the right hand of the Father in
His present day ministry where He ever liveth to make intercession for us.
This knowledge will help you grow out of the babyhood state into a full
grown man in Christ.

Here's God's commentary on the subject:

I CORINTHIANS 4:7

7 For who maketh thee to differ from another? and what hast thou that thou
didst not receive? now if thou didst receive it, why dost thou glory, as if thou
hadst not received it?

Whatever we have from God we received by grace.

EPHESIANS 4:7

7 But unto every one of us is given grace according to the measure of the gift
of Christ.

Each believer—though born-again as a babe—has a measure, a deposit of


grace that will meet every emergency in his life.

Every believer has the same new birth, the same Eternal Life, the same Love
of God, the same grace, the same Holy Spirit (we know Him first in a
measure in the new birth, but then there is the fullness of the Spirit available
to us), the same Eternal Intercessor, Jesus Christ, the same matchless
Heavenly Father.

If all this be true, then there is no reason for us to be weak and to remain
babies when by reason of time we should be developed.

Let's look again at the full grown believer in Ephesians 4:13-14, "Till we all
come in the unity of the faith, and of the knowledge of the Son of God, unto a
perfect man, unto the measure of the stature of the fullness of Christ: That we
henceforth be no more children...."

God never planned on your remaining a baby spiritually any more than He
planned on your remaining a baby physically, or mentally.

We're attracted to little babies. They're so sweet and wonderful. But wouldn't
it be sad for a little one to live twenty or twenty-five years and not grow
physically or mentally? I saw an individual like that—thirty-eight years old
and still in a bassinet. His mother nearing seventy would pin a diaper on him
and feed him just as you would a small baby. How your heart bleeds for
them. Aged parents, the other children grown and married, and they are left
with this one.
But, you know, how sad it is for Christians. Many are in the same boat. If we
could see spiritually, they've never developed. They're still babies. Forty
years old and still a baby. Selfish. Sensitive. Easily hurt. Envious. Jealous.

A deacon, an older man who'd been saved and filled with the Holy Ghost
thirty years came crying to the parsonage bawling like a baby, "Brother
Hagin, you don't visit me like you do some of the others. I saw your car three
times last week over at Brother So-and-so's house."

I said, "Yes, and there's another verse right under that. I'm not coming to see
you either. You get up and testify, 'I was saved thirty years ago last October,
filled with the Holy Ghost for thirty years.' "A big thirty year old baby.

This man he'd seen me visiting had just gotten saved in our meeting a week
or so before. Because he was just a newborn baby he'd stumbled around and
missed it. God talked to me in my heart and sent me out there to deal with
him. So I went out to help him.

I said to this deacon, "You don't need anyone running out there to visit you
and feed you the bottle.

You need to be out visiting others yourself."

We have churches full of babies. Take their bottles away and you have a cry
on your hands. Try to get them to get up and get out of the spiritual nursery
and give up their bed to some newborn babe and they wouldn't do it for
anything in the world.

Another deacon, a leader, supposed to be setting an example in the church,


got mad and wouldn't come. I knew something happened because his wife
kept coming. (Some men would be in a mess if they didn't have good wives.)
I saw him in town and he would hardly talk to me. He was hard and cold,
puffed up like a toad frog.

His wife was a sweet person and I asked her, "What's wrong with him?"

She said, "Oh, he's mad about something. He went home from church and
went to bed. He wouldn't even talk to me for three days. I finally just asked
him what was wrong. I thought maybe it was me. But it wasn't.

And it's not exactly you. Somebody sat in his pew. He always sits right here
in the second pew, the second seat from the end. When he got here and
someone was sitting there, he got so mad he stood up. He wouldn't sit
anywhere else."

A man like that isn't fit to be a deacon.

God never planned that he would remain a spiritual baby. He wants us to


grow spiritually.

Exhortations to Growth and Spirituality

EPHESIANS 3:20

20 Now unto him that is able to do exceeding abundantly above all that we
ask or think, according to the power that worketh in us.

There is no need for us to stay in a state of babyhood, or under development.


We have the Power of God working in us! We have the Ability of God
working in us! But instead of yielding to that, babies yield to the flesh.

PHILIPPIANS 4:13

13 I can do all things through Christ which strengtheneth me.

See! No place for under development!

HEBREWS 5:11

11 Of whom we have many things to say, and hard to be uttered, seeing ye


are dull of hearing.

The Book of Hebrews isn't written to the world; it's written to Christians, to
believers. If the believer isn't careful, he can become dull of hearing so that
the Word cannot reach him. This can hold him in that babyhood state and
carnality. Going on with the next verse...
HEBREWS 5:12

12 For when for the time ye ought to be teachers, ye have need that one teach
you again which be the first principles of the oracles of God; and are become
such as have need of milk, and not of strong meat.

This doesn't mean that everyone of them would have a teaching gift. It means
that because they have known and have been fed on the Word themselves,
they ought to be able to teach someone else. Every believer ought to aspire to
be the teacher of at least one. But you can't teach if you're a babe, and still on
milk.

HEBREWS 5:13-14

13 For every one that useth milk is unskilful in the word of righteousness: for
he is a babe.

But strong meat belongeth to them that are of full age,....

Paul talks about the same things in Timothy.

II TIMOTHY 3:7

7 Ever learning, and never able to come to the knowledge of the truth.

Isn't that the picture of some today? Going to church Sunday after Sunday,
ever learning, yet never arriving. If calamity comes, if sickness comes, if the
loss of property, or the death of loved ones comes, they stand paralyzed and
helpless in the presence of the enemy.

They have the resources of God because they are believers and He has made
provision for them. They have the Ability of God. They have His loving
Words.

But they have never taken advantage of it. They never avail themselves of the
riches that are theirs when the crises come.

Crises of life come to all of us. But it makes a big difference when a crisis
comes whether you are in the carnality babyhood stage, or whether you have
grown at least to some extent.

Children who have never developed when crisis comes, are unable to take
advantage of what belongs to them. They've stayed in their infancy. My what
a picture.

Ephesians 5:1 and 2 shows what they could be.

EPHESIANS 5:1-2

1 Be ye therefore followers of God, as dear children;

2 And walk in love, as Christ also hath loved us, and hath given himself for
us an offering and a sacrifice to God for a sweet-smelling savour.

I like another translation which reads, "Be ye therefore imitators of God, as


beloved children."

What's it talking about to follow God? to imitate God?

Remember, God is Love. In the First Epistle of John, which I wanted you to
stay in for awhile, John says in effect that if you walk in love, then you walk
in God, and God is in you and you're in God, because God is love.

Imitate God in love. "God so loved the world." He loved us while we were
yet sinners. Well, imitate Him in that. It's easy to love those who love you.
Anybody can do that. But we're supposed to do like God—to imitate Him in
love—and love the unlovely, love the unlovable, love our enemies.

You can't do that unless you have the Love of God in you. And you'll not do
it unless you grow in Love.

When you're sensitive and easily hurt, it doesn't take enemies outside the
body of Christ, but just a believer, a brother in the Lord, to do something that
doesn't amount to a hill of beans and you're so easily hurt you're almost ready
to cut his head off.

Be imitators of God walking in Love. This is our privilege. This is where we


should and could live. We have this New Covenant law to govern us as a
Church: JOHN 13:34-35

34 A new commandment I give unto you, That ye love one another; as I have
loved you, that ye also love one another.

35 By this shall all men know that ye are my disciples, if ye have love one to
another.

Fruit of the Human Spirit

Love is the first fruit of the human spirit when you are born-again. It's not the
fruit of the Holy Spirit. The translators were entirely wrong in putting a
capital "S"

in Galatians 5:22. It refers to the human spirit.

Jesus said, "I am the vine, ye are the branches"

(John 15:5).

Where does the fruit grow?

On the branches.

Who are the branches? The Holy Spirit?

No. We are.

This fruit of the spirit (Galatians 5:22) is fruit that grows in your life because
of the Life of Christ within.

How are you going to know and tell that you are saved?

"We know that we have passed from death unto life, because we love the
brethren" (I John 3:14).

This is the fruit of the recreated, born-again human spirit (Galatians 5:22-23).
You can take each fruit of the spirit and prove by the Bible that if you're
saved you have it. For instance, one is peace. Romans 5:1 says, "Therefore
being justified by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus
Christ."

If you are born-again, this Love is in you. You may not be practicing it. But
it's in your inward man, your spirit.

If you're ever going to grow and develop out of the babyhood state, you will
have to learn to feed this Love nature on the Word of God, and exercise this
love nature in the arena of life. Then you will grow in Love.

You'll not do it any other way. You could sit around all day and pray, "God,
give me love. God, help me love my brother. God, help me love the world,"
and it wouldn't do any more good than to twiddle your thumbs and say,
"Twinkle, twinkle, little star; How I wonder what you are."

But when you recognize the Bible teaches that because you are born of God
you are born of Love; that you are made a partaker of the divine nature, God's
nature, which is Love; and you have it, a measure of it at least...and then you
get ready to feed that love nature on the Word of God, and to put it into
practice...you will begin spiritual development and growth. And not until.

Love is absolutely to govern the heart life of the Church.

I CORINTHIANS 10:24

24 Let no man seek his own, but every man another's wealth (or good).

How many of us are seeking our own good? Most of us. When love does not
rule, then the motives of life become distorted; conduct becomes abnormal,
and the body rules the spirit causing the mind to be brought into captivity to
earthly things.

Renewing the Mind

ROMANS 12:2

2 And be not conformed to this world: but be ye transformed by the renewing


of your mind, that ye may prove what is that good, and acceptable, and
perfect, will of God.
The primal need of man is to have his mind renewed.

"And be not conformed to this world...." (Another translation says, "Be not
conformed to this age.") Don't think like this age thinks! Don't think like this
generation thinks. Don't think like this world thinks!

Don't be fashioned according to this world, or this age.

"...but be ye transformed by the renewing of your mind, that ye may prove


what is that good, and acceptable, and perfect, will of God." This infers that if
your mind is renewed—and it becomes renewed by the Word of God—then
you will know what is the good, the acceptable (one translation
says "permissive"), and the perfect will of God. But until your mind is
renewed, you will stay in the state of babyhood.

COLOSSIANS 3:10

10 And have put on the new man, which is renewed in knowledge after the
image of him that created him:

It is deeply important that the believer's mind be renewed after the image of
Jesus. That's one reason He sent the Holy Ghost to indwell us and be our
Teacher and Guide. He said, "Howbeit when he, the Spirit of truth, is come,
he will guide you into all truth:..." (This can only come as the Spirit, through
the Word, guides us into the reality of our redemption in Christ.) "...for he
shall not speak of himself; but whatsoever he shall hear, that shall he speak:
and he will shew you things to come" (John 16:13).

EPHESIANS 4:23-24

23 And be renewed in the spirit of your mind; 24 And that ye put on the new
man, which after God is created in righteousness and true holiness.

You know as well as I, that if you put on the new man created after God in
righteousness and true holiness, that is going to be the end of envyings,
jealousies, strifes, and divisions, isn't it? Therefore, you wouldn't be a babe in
that carnal state anymore.
ROMANS 12:1-2

1 I beseech you therefore, brethren, by the mercies of God, that ye present


your bodies a living sacrifice, holy, acceptable unto God, which is your
reasonable service.

2 And be not conformed to this world: but be ye transformed by the renewing


of your mind....

Paul didn't write this to unsaved people. It came as a real shock to me, after
fifteen years in the ministry, when I realized that Paul is saying to people who
are born-again and filled with the Holy Ghost that it hadn't affected their
bodies or their minds.

Therefore the new birth and the baptism of the Holy Spirit are not mental
experiences, nor physical experiences, but spiritual experiences.

After you are born again, and after you are filled with the Holy Ghost, it is up
to you to do something with your body. It is up to you to do something with
your mind.

The real you is the man on the inside—the spirit man. You are to present
your body to God. (He does want transfigured bodies.) And you are to get
your mind renewed. How? With the Word of God. By meditating on and
practicing the Word of God.

Chapter 13

A WORD OF ENCOURAGEMENT

Don't become discouraged because you don't become a full grown Christian
overnight. You didn't become a full grown human overnight.

The Bible says for us to examine ourselves. It doesn't say for me to examine
you, or for you to examine me. But to examine yourself. As I examine
myself, in some areas I think I'm growing pretty well, that I'm pretty well
matured. But as I look at another place, it seems like I'm still a baby in that
area. And then as I look in another area it seems like I'm in the childhood
state. I dare say you are in the same boat.

Is anyone fully grown up? fully spiritual? already perfected in love? I don't
think so. But, praise God, we're on our way!

Don't be discouraged because you don't get there overnight. You didn't
become discouraged because you went one week to school and they didn't
graduate you the next. No, you stayed on in the first grade and were tickled to
get in the second grade the next year.

You will not grow up spiritually overnight any more than you grew up
mentally or physically overnight. But there's one thing about it—there's no
need of your not growing.

It is always the greatest concern of my life whether or not I know more about
God and have grown any this year above last year.

I believe in going on to perfection. I'm not perfect yet, are you? But I'm going
on. I'm not going to stop and quit just because I didn't grow up last week, or
because I made a mistake or failed.

The full grown Christian won't do that either, because he knows that Jesus is
right there to represent him at the right hand of the Father.

Every step out of love is sin. Too often we've gotten in our minds that you
didn't sin unless you broke one of the ten commandments. But that was the
law of the Old Covenant. The new law of the New Covenant is that we love
one another. So every word said out of love is sin. Every act made out of love
is sin.

But this Epistle written to the Church says, "My little children, these things
write I unto you, that ye sin not. And if any man sin, we have an advocate
with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous" (I John 2:1).

As I look back—and I guess anyone who has had any spiritual growth is the
same way, we thought we were doing pretty well spiritually, back when we
were in some areas of babyhood. We thought we were living practically
sinless. We met all the human standards they set for us, so we thought we
were practically sinless. But then, as we grow up a little and develop
spiritually, and we look back we see we were sinning more than we thought
we were. We come to find out we missed it more than we thought we did.

We failed to walk in love.

But just because we failed, we didn't stay there. We got up and went again.

It is the knowledge of God's Word that helps us to grow. That Word is


spiritual food—food for our spirits!
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